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● 05.16.23


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● Links 16/05/2023: Arch’s Git Migration


Posted in News Roundup at 8:48 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz


GNU/Linux


Desktop/Laptop


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ COSMIC desktop from System76 coming along nicely


System76 are busy hacking away on their new upcoming COSMIC desktop environment, and their latest development blog post is looking good. They also recently released System76 Scheduler 2.0, to further optimize the performance of their Linux distribution.


Server


↺ Kubernetes Blog ☛ Blog: Kubernetes 1.27: KMS V2 Moves to Beta [Ed: Blog of Kubernetes now a megaphone of Microsoft, which attacks Linux and Free software in all sorts of ways]


Instructionals/Technical


↺ Unix Men ☛ Modern eCommerce Development with Headless Frameworks and Synergy of Linux


In the past, eCommerce developers were limited by the technology they could use. However, today’s advances in eCommerce development have allowed for more innovative solutions that can be created using headless frameworks and Linux servers. This trend is transforming how eCommerce platforms are built, allowing for greater flexibility and scalability.


↺ Linux Cloud VPS ☛ Sign up for a LinuxCloudVPS today


Apache CouchDB is a free yet reliable non-relational or NoSQL database engine. It is written in Erlang language and natively supports data in JSON format. The data can be accessed and queried via the HTTP protocol, making it easier and more scalable compared to traditional SQL relational databases like MySQL. CouchDB also offers replication capability and provides high availability access. This tutorial will show you how to install CouchDB on AlmaLinux.


↺ Kev Quirk ☛ Underline Your Links


I’ve talked about this myself in the past and I wholeheartedly agree with Jatan on this. While perusing the internet I’ve seen links that are formatted in all kinds of ways, even ones that don’t seem to be formatted at all and are, to my eye at least, completely indistinguishable from the rest of the body text.


↺ Jatan Mehta ☛ Colored vs. underlined links


Colored text links on the Internet are popular. The familiar blue touted by a majority of hyperlinks on the Web goes back to 1993. However, as the linked article explores, web links used to be underlined for a decade before they went blue. I think we should go back to having underlined links everywhere for several reasons.


↺ University of Toronto ☛ The time our Linux systems spend on integer to text and back conversions


We run the Prometheus host agent on all of our Linux machines. Every fifteen seconds our Prometheus server pulls metrics from all the host agents, which causes the host agent to read a bunch of /proc files (for things like memory and CPU state information) and /sys files (for things like hwmon information). These status files are text, but they contain a lot of numbers, which means that the kernel converted those integers into text for us. The host agent then converts that text back into numbers internally (I believe a mixture of 64-bit integers and 64-bit floats), only to turn around and send them to the Prometheus server as text again (see Exposition Formats, also). On the Prometheus server these text numbers will be turned back into floats. All of this takes CPU cycles, although perhaps not many CPU cycles on modern machines.


↺ Earthly ☛ Linux Text Processing Command


This tutorial aims to introduce you to the concept of Linux text processing, highlight its benefits, and provide an overview of the commonly used text processing commands. You will also learn about their use cases and how they can help automate tedious tasks, making them more manageable in a matter of seconds.


↺ DebugPoint ☛ Guide to Set up Full Wayland with Arch Linux


Arch Linux users may find setting up a custom install with Wayland complex. Only KDE Plasma and GNOME have up-to-date Wayland support among all the mainstream desktop environments. Xfce, LXQt and other desktops are developing Wayland support, but they are not ready yet.


On the window manager front, Sway has full Wayland support in Arch Linux. That being said, I wanted to test how Wayland is performing in Arch and want to give you a status check as of today.


Here’s what I found.


↺ Make Use Of ☛ What Is a KVM? Kernel-Based Virtual Machines Explained


Virtual machines are an essential tool for running guest operating systems. If you’ve never heard of KVMs, you’re not alone. It’s easy to wonder: what is KVM, and what does it stand for? How can you use KVM as a virtualization technology in your projects?


Getting started with KVMs on Linux is a simple process. If you want to run other Linux distributions or even Windows on your Linux PC, all you need to do is install a few modules and prepare your PC for virtualization. Here’s how you can start using KVM on Linux.


Games


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ Time running out to swap your Minecraft account over to Microsoft [Ed: An "important reminder" that you should quit playing this game; try Minetest]


Mojang recently sent out a rather important reminder, as the time is running out to swap your Mojang account for Minecraft over to Microsoft.


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ Roots of Pacha removed from Steam after fight with publisher Crytivo


Seems the indie team at Soda Den are having some issues with their publisher Crytivo, and their fight has caused Roots of Pacha to be removed from Steam for now.


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ Albion Online ‘Knightfall’ is here with new content and improved controls


Offering up plenty of new content for players to explore, the Knightfall update for Albion Online is here and it may be time to give it another look.


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ Roblox still plan to make it work with Wine on Linux


The situation is currently a bit messy, with conflicting statements but it appears that Roblox should work again on Linux / Steam Deck with Wine eventually.


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ Fanatical’s Bundle Fest begins with the Killer Bundle 26


Fanatical do a Bundle Fest every now and then, where a new bundle of games is announced every day for a week and the first is the Killer Bundle 26.


↺ Hackaday ☛ New DOS PCs, In 2023?


It’s not likely that we’ll talk about a new PC here at Hackaday because where’s the news in yet another commodity computer? But today along comes not one but two new PCs courtesy of the ever bounteous hall of wonders at AliExpress, that are unusual enough to take a look at. If you have around $250 to spare, you can have a brand new, made in 2023, 80386sx plamtop PC capable of running Windows 95, or an 8088 laptop for DOS. Just what on earth is going on?


Distributions and Operating Systems


Arch Family


↺ Git migration announcement


This Friday morning (2023-05-19) the Git packaging migration will start until Sunday (2023-05-21). The Arch Linux packaging team will not be able to update packages in any of the repositories during this period.


Canonical/Ubuntu Family


↺ 9to5Linux ☛ Ubuntu 23.10 to Offer Improved Management of PPAs for Better Security


Development of Ubuntu 23.10 kicked off at the end of April 2023 and now we start to see new features landing in the upcoming release. One of these new features was revealed by Canonical’s Julian Andres Klode on the Ubuntu mailing list and it’s related to how PPA archives will be handled.


Until now, Ubuntu managed PPA archives through a traditional .list file that was stored in the /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ directory and accompanied by a GPG keyring stored on /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d.


Devices/Embedded


↺ Linux Gizmos ☛ $99.00 Orange Pi 5 Plus SBC is now available to order


Orange Pi recently launched a single board computer equipped with an octa-core Rockchip RK35588 SoC along with an up to 6 TOPs NPU. The new SBC can handle up to four displays, two 2.5GbE LAN interfaces and many other expansion ports.


Mobile Systems/Mobile Applications


↺ Phone Arena ☛ Sonos discontinues important feature for Android devices – PhoneArena


↺ SlashGear ☛ The Best Wellness Apps On Android For Stress And Anxiety


↺ Geeky Gadgets ☛ How to fix a frozen Android Phone – Geeky Gadgets


↺ Android Authority ☛ How to find your IMEI number on an Android phone – Android Authority


Free, Libre, and Open Source Software


↺ Silicon Angle ☛ Together raises $20M to decentralize and open-source AI model creation


As part of this mission, Together aims to establish open source as the default way to design and build AI. One of its aims is to create open models that outperform their closed-source brethren. To do this, Together is collaborating with various open-source groups, academic and corporate research labs, while assembling an impressive team of committed AI researchers, engineers and practitioners.


↺ Together ☛ Together’s $20M seed funding to build open-source AI and cloud platform


When Chris, Percy, Ce and I first got together last year, we all felt it was clear that foundation models represented a generational shift in technology, maybe the most significant since the invention of the transistor. At the time, we could see the trend toward centralization of these models within a small number of corporations due to the vast expense of high-end GPU clusters needed for training. Meanwhile, the open community that had led the innovations in AI over the prior decades had limited agency in shaping the coming world of AI. In founding Together, we were driven by the belief that open and decentralized alternatives to closed systems were going to be important — and possibly critical for business and society.


↺ Olaf Alders ☛ PrettyGoodPing: Now with, you know, Ping


When I first created prettygoodping.com, it didn’t just check SSL/TLS expiration dates and domain name expirations. It could also ping servers and make HTTP HEAD requests to check URL uptime. However, I didn’t add the existing ping and HTTP HEAD checks to the beta accounts. That made for a simpler launch as there were fewer things to go wrong, but it also made for a more confusing name. PrettyGoodPing didn’t, you know, ping.


I’ve been beta testing the ping and HEAD checks in my own account for a few months now and I’m happy with them. It’s time to make them more widely available.


Productivity Software/LibreOffice/Calligra


↺ School Result Management System in LibreOffice Base [Projects for Students]


In this tutorial, I will walk you through the steps to create a simple school result management system in LibreOffice Base.


The tutorial outlines the steps to create a database, tables, forms and how to extend it for your needs.


Education


↺ EuroBSDCon ☛ EuroBSDCon 2023 will be in Coimbra, Portugal: September 14-17, 2023


EuroBSDCon is the International annual technical conference held in a different European country each year. It focuses on gathering users and developers working on and with 4.4BSD (Berkeley Software Distribution) based operating systems family and related projects.


↺ DragonFly BSD Digest ☛ SEMI-BUG and CARP tomorrow [iophk: 16 May]


SEMIBUG’s having a presentation on CARP tomorrow. It’s being given by Nick Holland who has a long presentation history. It’ll be online through Jitsi, so anyone can see it.


Programming/Development


↺ Daniel Lemire ☛ Computing the UTF-8 size of a Latin 1 string quickly (ARM NEON edition)


While most of our software relies on Unicode strings, we often still encounter legacy encodings such as Latin 1. Before we convert Latin 1 strings to Unicode (e.g., UTF-8), we must compute the size of the UTF-8 string. It is fairly easy: all ASCII characters map 1 byte to 1 byte, while other characters (with code point values from 128 to 256) map 1 Latin byte to 2 Unicode bytes (in UTF-8).


↺ Rlang ☛ Working with Dates and Times Pt 2: Finding the Next Mothers Day with Simplicity


Mother’s Day is a special occasion to honor and appreciate the incredible women in our lives. As programmers, we can use our coding skills to make our lives easier when it comes to important dates like Mother’s Day. In this blog post, we’ll walk through a simple and engaging R code that helps us find the next Mother’s Day. So grab your coding hats, and let’s get started!


↺ TecMint ☛ Node.js Version Managers – Install and Run Multiple Node.js Versions


Node.js version managers, also known as “environment managers” are tools that enable developers or system administrators to install and manage several Node.js versions on their computers or servers.


These managers are useful since different projects may require different versions of Node.js, and manually switching between versions can be difficult.


Python


↺ Nicholas Tietz-Sokolsky ☛ It’s easier to code review Rust than Python


On Monday, I was talking to a friend about programming and I mentioned that I prefer to review Rust code over Python code. He asked why, and I had some rambling answer, but I had to take some time to think about it. It boils down to the fact that I can give a much better review of Rust code, despite having much more exposure to Python.


Leftovers


↺ Scheerpost ☛ Whose Planet Are We On?


What happens when LTAI (Less Than Artificial Intelligence) gives way to AI?


↺ Techdirt ☛ Once Again, ‘Free Speech Absolutist’ Elon Musk Caves To Authoritarian Censorial Bullies


We tend to think of McSweeney’s as a satire magazine, but on this one, it’s dead on: [...]


Science


↺ [Old] uni New Mexico ☛ Introduction To Fourier Transforms For Image Processing


The Fourier Transform ( in this case, the 2D Fourier Transform ) is the series expansion of an image function ( over the 2D space domain ) in terms of “cosine” image (orthonormal) basis functions.


Education


↺ Quillette ☛ The Cost of Dissent


Wherever possible, dissent should proceed from wisdom, which follows dialogue and deliberation. Uninformed dissent inhibits or destroys the very innovation and progress that diversity of opinion is meant to bring about, turning a society into a Tower of Babel, in which atomized individuals spout mutually unintelligible opinions. Such a situation was described by the early modern Italian philosopher of history Giambattista Vico in his masterpiece, New Science: [...]


↺ The Drone Girl ☛ Smithsonian Air and Space Museum to host awards ceremony for female drone industry trailblazers


The 2023 Women in Emerging Aviation Technology Awards is not a new program, but it’s gone through quite the evolution. It started as simply a drone-focused awards ceremony but — as drones have morphed to encompass similar tech like air taxis — the awards program also grew to encompass general ’emerging aviation technology.’


Hardware


↺ Hackaday ☛ Hackaday Prize 2023: A DIY Voice-Control Module


If science fiction taught us anything, it’s that voice control was going to be the human-machine interface of the future. [Dennis] has now whipped up a tutorial that lets you add a voice control module to any of your own projects.


↺ Hackaday ☛ This $12 CNC Rotary Axis Will Make Your Head Spin


[legolor] brings us a great, cheap rotary axis to add to your small 3 axis CNC mills. How are you going to generate G-Code for this 4th axis? That’s the great part, and the hack, that [legolor] really just swapped the Y axis for the rotation. To finish the workflow and keep things cheap accessible to all there’s a great trick to “unwrap” your 3D model so your CAM software of choice thinks it’s still using a linear Y axis and keeps your existing workflow largely intact. While this requires an extra step in Blender to do the unwrapping, we love the way this hack changes as little of the rest of your process as possible. The Blender script might be useful for many other purposes too.


↺ Hackaday ☛ Modern CO2 Laser Reviewed


If you’ve got a laser cutter, it is highly probable that it uses a laser diode. But more expensive machines use a carbon dioxide laser tube along with mirrors. There was a time when these lasers came in two flavors: very expensive and amazing or moderately expensive and cheaply made. However, we are seeing that even the moderately expensive machines are now becoming quite advanced. [Chad] reviews a 55-watt xTool P2. At around $5,000, it is still a little spendy for a home shop, but it does have pretty amazing features. We can only hope some less expensive diode lasers will adopt some of these features.


↺ Hackaday ☛ A Free TV With A Catch: New Normal Or Inevitable Hardware Bonanza?


The dystopian corporate dominated future may have taken a step closer, as a startup called Telly promises a free 55 inch 4K TV with a catch — a second screen beneath the main one that displays adverts. The viewers definitely aren’t the customers but the product, and will no doubt have every possible piece of data that can be harvested from them sold to the highest bidder. There’s even a microphone and camera pointed at the viewer, to complete the 1984 experience. In a sense it’s nothing new, as certain TV manufacturers have been trying to slip adverts into the interfaces on their paid-for smart TVs for years.


↺ Hackaday ☛ A Paste Extruder For Normal Printers


In the bright sunshine of a warm spring afternoon at Delft Maker Faire, were a row of 3D printers converted with paste extruders. They were the work of [Nedji Yusufova], and though while were being shown printing with biodegradable pastes made from waste materials, we were also interested in their potential to print using edible media.


Health/Nutrition/Agriculture


↺ Counter Punch ☛ 2023-04-26 [Older] The Dogs of Chernobyl


↺ Common Dreams ☛ Witnessing the Resilience of Mothers in Southern Bangladesh


As we celebrate Mother’s Day, I am inspired by the incredible strength and resilience of mothers worldwide. But as an obstetrician-gynecologist who has treated patients in crisis regions around the world, I am reminded of the countless mothers globally who struggle to keep their children healthy and safe, often in the face of insurmountable obstacles. Through my travels, I have witnessed firsthand the devastating consequences that can result when women do not have access to the basic maternal health services they need. The consequences of inadequate maternal health services are heartbreaking, from preventable complications during pregnancy and childbirth to the devastating loss of a child.


↺ Pro Publica ☛ Family That Controlled Liberty HealthShare Shows Financial Strain


In just a handful of years, members of a Canton, Ohio, family built a financial empire that included a boutique airline, a bank in the Missouri Ozarks, a chain of carpet stores, a marijuana farm in Oregon, and more than $20 million in real estate. The “conglomerate,” as the Beers family calls it, was made possible by hundreds of millions of dollars collected from Americans who thought they had found an affordable alternative to medical insurance. Instead, many were saddled with debt.


The conglomerate, however, is showing signs of strain as the family downsizes its workforce and sells off some of its holdings. These moves will free up cash, said an attorney who represents several family members, and allow them to pay off a court settlement related to its alleged fraud. Now, another big debt has come their way: Several family members face liens placed against their properties for millions in back taxes.


↺ ProtocolKills.com revisited: Misinformed refusal turned up to 11


A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about ProtocolKills.com, a website and effort started by a woman named Greta Crawford in order to “inform”—misinform, actually—the public about the supposed dangers of hospital protocols to treat COVID-19 and how hospitals, not COVID-19, had killed so many people and almost killed her, a conclusion that she came to seemingly because everyone in her family caught COVID-19 but she was the only one who was hospitalized with serious illness from it. Basically, a large part of the website includes anecdotes from COVID-19 patients who became severely ill and were hospitalized (or their surviving family members if they didn’t make it), all complaining about how doctors and hospitals wouldn’t treat them or their loved ones with ivermectin or any other unproven/disproven treatment or quackery and how intubation, remdesivir, intubation, and everything else about conventional medicine, not COVID-19, had harmed them or killed their loved ones. Indeed, I had become aware of the website when I saw this poster in a shop window near the barber shop where I had just gotten a haircut (and where I had happened to walk past last week while heading to a restaurant, only to see that the images are still there):


↺ The Nation ☛ What Demon Copperhead Gets Right About Appalachia


Barbara Kingsolver dedicates her Pulitzer Prize–winning novel Demon Copperhead to survivors of the opioid crisis and foster care. It wouldn’t be an exaggeration to say that the book is dedicated to me: I am an Appalachian who was put in foster care thanks to, in part, my father’s opioid addiction.


Proprietary


↺ Daniel Miessler ☛ The AI Attack Surface Map v1.0


Once those AI-powered products and services start to appear we’re going to have an entirely new species of vulnerability to deal with. We hope with this resource to bring some clarity to that landscape.


↺ The Economist ☛ What does a leaked Google memo reveal about the future of AI?


They have changed the world by writing software. But techy types are also known for composing lengthy memos in prose, the most famous of which have marked turning points in computing. Think of Bill Gates’s “Internet tidal wave” memo of 1995, which reoriented Microsoft towards the web; or Jeff Bezos’s “API mandate” memo of 2002, which opened up Amazon’s digital infrastructure, paving the way for modern cloud computing. Now techies are abuzz about another memo, this time leaked from within Google, titled “We have no moat”. Its unknown author details the astonishing progress being made in artificial intelligence (AI)—and challenges some long-held assumptions about the balance of power in this fast-moving industry.


↺ NBC ☛ Navy retirees see cuts to monthly benefits, must repay $7M after system overpayment error


The Navy Times first reported the error, which resulted in incorrect service time calculations for 1,283 retirees from August 2019 to February.


That error created a total debt of about $6.8 million, according to new data obtained by NBC News. The personal debts incurred range from $35 to more than $70,000, the Defense Finance and Accounting Service said Monday.


↺ NBC ☛ Navy doctors and dentists are told they owe 3 more years of service after military admits to another record-keeping error


At least 65 dentists and physicians with the Navy Reserves have had three to four years of service erased from their records after an error was discovered in how their retirement credits had been calculated, the Navy said. Navy Reserve dentists and doctors provide care to members of any branch of service and their family members.


Four affected physicians and dentists came forward with their plights, speaking to NBC News on the condition of anonymity out of fear of retaliation, days after the Army acknowledged a similar administrative error affecting hundreds of aviation officers.


↺ NBC ☛ Army aviators, ready to leave the military, are told they owe 3 more years instead


As part of a program known as BRADSO, cadets commissioning from the U.S. Military Academy or Army Cadet Command from 2008 and 2020 were able to request a branch of their choice, including aviation, by agreeing to serve an additional three years on active duty.


For years, the Army allowed some aviation officers to serve those three years concurrently, and not consecutively, along with their roughly contracted seven or eight years of service.


In a phone call with reporters Thursday, Army officials admitted “errors” in the system, which they noticed a few months ago, led to the discrepancy.


↺ Gannett ☛ Building curious machines


“Seafloor mapping can help us understand ocean currents that drive our climate system by moving heat around the planet, help us understand ecosystems, help us find natural resources, help us predict earthquakes and tsunamis, and of course, any time you want to do any kind of engineering on the seafloor, you need a very accurate map,” Mayer said. “But the most exciting thing is that we just don’t know what’s there. You can’t go out and map the seafloor without finding something exciting.”


↺ uni Michigan ☛ U-M experts: We need to emphasize AI’s societal impacts over technological advancements


Most importantly, both say we need to be less in awe of the technological advancements and more focused on the societal risks and benefits.


This conversation is excerpted from the podcast, Business and Society with Michigan Ross.


Pseudo-Open Source


Openwashing


↺ India Times ☛ OpenAI readies new open-source AI model: report


The company did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for a comment.


Security


↺ CISA ☛ 2023-05-04 [Older] CISA Releases One Industrial Control Systems Advisory


↺ Silicon Angle ☛ CISA adds new Linux vulnerabilities to catalog, warns they’re being actively exploited [Ed: Microsoft inside CISA; iophk: note the years on those CVEs]


↺ Silicon Angle ☛ CISA adds new Linux vulnerabilities to catalog, warns they’re being actively exploited [Ed: Microsoft inside CISA; iophk: note the years on those CVEs]


The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has added seven new Linux-related vulnerabilities to its catalog and warned that they’re being actively exploited.


↺ Security Week ☛ CISA: Several Old Linux Vulnerabilities Exploited in Attacks [Ed: Those are not new at all; are they having a go at FUD?]


Several old Linux vulnerabilities for which there are no public reports of malicious exploitation have been added to CISA’s KEV catalog.


↺ CISA Warns Several Old Linux Vulns Exploited in Attacks


The Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) added seven new Linux vulnerabilities to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog on Friday based on evidence of active exploitation, some of which have been known for a decade…


Privacy/Surveillance


↺ CoryDoctorow ☛ Ireland’s privacy regulator is a gamekeeper-turned-poacher


That cozy relationship meant that the US tech giants were well-situated to sabotage Ireland’s privacy regulator, who would be the first port of call for Europeans whose privacy had been violated by American firms. For many years, it’s been obvious that the Irish Data Protection Commission was a sleeping watchdog, with infinite tolerance for the companies that pretend to make Ireland their homes. 87% of Irish data protection claims involve just eight giant US companies (that pretend to be Irish).


But even among hardened GDPR warriors, the real extent of the Data Protection Commissioner’s uselessness is genuinely shocking. A new report from the Irish Council for Civil Liberties reveals that the DPC isn’t merely tolerant of privacy crimes, they’re gamekeepers turned poachers, active collaborators in privacy abuse: [...]


Defence/Aggression


↺ Meduza ☛ Interior minister of self-declared ‘LNR’ Igor Kornet seriously injured in explosion — Meduza


The interior minister of the self-declared Luhansk People’s Republic (LNR), Igor Kornet, was injured in an explosion in Luhansk, reports Russia’s state media TASS and RIA Novosti.


↺ Eesti Rahvusringhääling ☛ Putin war criminal poster taken down from Narva Castle walls


Speaking to ERR’s Russian-language news, Maria Smorževskihh-Smirnova, director of the Narva Museum, responsible for the action, said that the plan had been to leave the installation where it was into the start of this week, by which time it would have fulfilled its function.


That function was a response to a May 9 concert played on the Russian side of the Narva river, under the eaves of the Ivangorod Castle which was viewable, and audible, from the Estonian side.


↺ The Telegraph UK ☛ Million more migrants heading to Britain before next election, ministers warned


The revelation came on top of a record 504,000 in net migration posted last summer with expert forecasts that net migration could rise further to hit a record 700,000 for the year ending December – and potentially even 997,000 when the official figures are published in two weeks’ time.


While the warnings from officials are about legal migration, Rishi Sunak has made tackling illegal entry into the UK one of his five priorities


↺ Patrick Breyer ☛ Summary of Statement Public Prosecutor’s Office, Central and Contact Point Cybercrime (ZAC) on the public hearing of the Digital Affairs Committee of the German Bundestag on “Chat Control”


The assessment is made primarily from the perspective of prosecutorial and general law enforcement practice. The perspectives of prevention, improved compliance and other effects on societal, political as well as technical aspects are only examined in their respective interaction with law enforcement in view of the expertise available here.


The proposal for a regulation also has an impact on the activities of the national law enforcement authorities dealing with the crime of child abuse in the digital space.


↺ Democracy Now ☛ Ongoing Catastrophe: Israel Threatens New Mass Expulsions as Palestinians, U.N. Mark 75th Nakba Anniversary


Palestinians across the globe are marking the 75th anniversary of the Nakba (“catastrophe” in Arabic), when some 700,000 Palestinians fled from or were violently expelled from their homes upon Israel’s founding in 1948. The occasion comes as five days of fighting, that killed 33 Palestinians in Gaza and two people in Israel, was brought to a stop this weekend after the Israeli army and the militant group Islamic Jihad agreed to a Egyptian-brokered ceasefire. Today the United Nations is holding its first-ever high-level special meeting to commemorate the Nakba. We host a roundtable discussion with Munir Nuseibah, a human rights lawyer and director of Al-Quds Human Rights Clinic in Jerusalem; Saleh Hijazi, a member of the Palestinian Boycott National Committee; and Peter Beinart, editor-at-large for Jewish Currents.


↺ The Nation ☛ 100 Years of Palestinian Popular Resistance


The 1947–49 Nakba is the consciousness-searing fulcrum of Palestinian history. It signified the consolidation of the Zionist project in Palestine, which resulted in the dispossession of 750,000 to a million Palestinians from their lands, homes, and livelihoods. The term “Nakba” means catastrophe: a world-destroying upheaval. Among the 7 million Palestinian refugees today left waiting in the anteroom of history—and the 7 million more living in their historic homeland under an expanding regime of expropriation and domination—this catastrophe is as much a condition of the present as it is a wound of the past.


↺ The Nation ☛ Reflections on the 75th Anniversary of a Nakba That Never Ended


If you’re driving across the length of our bruised geography, you will at various points encounter rubble. Sometimes it is the rubble of a house in Jerusalem, demolished once, or more than once, in the past few decades. Other times, it is the ruins of a village, depopulated in 1948, now poorly concealed under a forest of pine trees planted by the Jewish National Fund. Sometimes it is the rubble of a bullet-strafed home in the occupied Syrian Golan, which came to its knees during the 1967 invasion. Other times, it is the rubble of a residential building bombed during one of the assaults on the besieged Gaza Strip—in 2008, ’09, ’12, ’14, ’19, or ’21. Or, if you are reading this a few years from now, it may well be the wreckage of Silwan, Masafer Yatta, and the Naqab, towns that are still bustling but threatened.


As you breeze through this landscape, you will likely come across towns and refugee camps with posters of our martyrs pinned all over the walls. The dates on some of the posters may be difficult to decipher, but you can guess when they were first plastered by looking at their condition: If they are pristine and vibrant, they’re fresh off the press; if brittle and faded, damaged by rain, dirt, or stray bullets, and peeling off the walls, they might be from some time ago—the Second Intifada or one of the intifadas that came after. Many, likely most, of the faces will be unfamiliar to you, for they have been killed outside the international news cycle—their deaths marked only by fleeting local headlines. If you slow down to read, you might find portraits of a father and a son sharing the same wall, an uncle and a niece, sometimes from the same year, sometimes generations apart.


↺ The Nation ☛ Shootings


↺ Telex (Hungary) ☛ Hungary and China can count on each other to strengthen the voice of the peace camp – Szijjártó in Beijing


“Hungary and China can count on each other to strengthen the voice of the peace camp, and the two countries will work closely together to achieve a ceasefire in Ukraine as soon as possible and to establish peace talks,” Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Péter Szijjártó said in Beijing on Monday.


↺ Telex (Hungary) ☛ Czechs reject Orbán’s comparison of the unification of EU with Hitler’s plans


Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavský rejected Viktor Orbán’s comparison of the unification of Europe with Hitler’s plans, pointing out that no one is forcing Hungary to be part of the European community.


↺ Meduza ☛ Russia’s chief federal investigator launches criminal case against security guards who wouldn’t let him onto construction site — Meduza


Russia’s Investigative Committee head Alexander Bastrykin has launched a criminal case against the security guards who wouldn’t let him onto a St. Petersburg construction site on May 14.


↺ Meduza ☛ Kremlin says to rely on ‘official information’ about health of Alexander Lukashenko, who hasn’t appeared in public since May 9 — Meduza


Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov urged Russians to look to “official reports” for information regarding the health of Alexander Lukashenko.


↺ Meduza ☛ France pledges additional military aid to Ukraine after surprise talks — Meduza


France pledged to send dozens of armored vehicles and light tanks to Ukraine after a surprise three-hour meeting between Volodymyr Zelensky and French President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday.


↺ Meduza ☛ Art conservators alarmed by Putin’s decision to transfer Andrey Rublev’s fragile ‘Holy Trinity’ masterpiece from Tretyakov Gallery to church — Meduza


The Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church has announced that Andrey Rublev’s famous “Holy Trinity” ikon, until now part of the Tretyakov Gallery collection, is church property once again, following Vladimir Putin’s special order.


↺ Meduza ☛ Kremlin has reportedly banned senior officials from resigning under threat of criminal prosecution — Meduza


The Kremlin has threatened to press felony charges against senior Russian officials who resign while the war is going on, according to the independent outlet iStories.


↺ Meduza ☛ Aeroflot has reportedly ordered flight attendants not to record plane malfunctions before consulting pilot — Meduza


In March 2022, shortly after Russia was hit with new sanctions in response to its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the country’s largest commercial airline, Aeroflot, reportedly sent out an internal memo instructing senior flight attendants to record technical failures and cabin equipment malfunctions only after consulting the plane’s pilot.


↺ Meduza ☛ Russia spends $22 million on radio network analyzers to combat drone attacks in Rostov region and annexed Crimea — Meduza


The Main Radio Frequency Center (GRChTs), an entity overseen by Russia’s federal censorship agency, has purchased equipment for determining the source of radio emissions and for spectrum analysis, according to Forbes Russia.


↺ Meduza ☛ Russian airline Azimut cleared for direct flights from Russia to Georgia — Meduza


Georgia’s government has cleared the Russian airline Azimut for direct flights into the country, TASS reports. Charter flights between Moscow and Tbilisi are set to begin on May 17.


↺ Meduza ☛ Russian lawmakers approve amendment to martial law allowing elections and deportation of residents in annexed territories — Meduza


An amendment to a law on holding elections during martial law won committee approval in Russia’s State Duma, reports Russian state media TASS.


↺ Meduza ☛ Lukashenko says Belarusian troops on high alert after ‘four aircraft shot down in Bryansk region’ — Meduza


Belarusian troops are on high alert after “four aircraft were shot down in Russia’s Bryansk region,” reported Alexander Lukashenko, in a meeting with the Belarusian military.


↺ Meduza ☛ Russia’s Defense Ministry claims to have intercepted Storm Shadow missile — Meduza


In its daily briefing, the Russian Defense Ministry announced that, within the past 24 hours, the Russian air defense had intercepted a long-range Storm Shadow missile. The agency did not specify where or when exactly the missile had been shot down.


↺ Meduza ☛ ‘A very grim portrait’ Political scientist Erica Frantz on what Russia’s future holds after Putin — Meduza


Political scientist Erica Frantz, an associate professor at Michigan State University, has been studying authoritarian regimes for more than 15 years and has written multiple books on the topic. She and her coauthors have compiled a database of nearly 300 authoritarian regimes that have existed around the globe since 1946. Using these data, the researchers have analyzed how and why various autocracies have come to an end, how often their leaders have fallen from power after starting wars, and what’s happened to their countries after their deaths. Meduza special correspondent Margarita Lyutova spoke to Frantz about what her research portends for the future of Russia.


Transparency/Investigative Reporting


↺ The Dissenter ☛ Classification Reform Bill Would Give President, Security Agencies Even More Power To Maintain Secrets


Environment


↺ Quartz ☛ The EU showed it’s possible to reduce carbon emissions while posting economic growth


The European Union (EU) has announced that its carbon emissions significantly declined in the final fiscal quarter of 2022, even as its gross domestic product (GDP) grew. Emissions fell by 4% year-over-year, while GDP increased by 1.5% during the same period.


This is a major milestone for the trading bloc, which has looked to balance economic growth with its aggressive plan to transition to renewable energy sources.


↺ JURIST ☛ HRW says fossil fuel phaseout and rights safeguards are essential for Global Plastics Treaty


Human Rights Watch (HRW) on Monday urged countries involved in ongoing negotiations for an international anti-plastic pollution treaty to address the role of fossil fuels in plastic production. The organization also cited the need for human rights protections to be included within this Global Plastics Treaty.


On November 28, 2022, countries began treaty negotiations based on a United Nations resolution mandating the creation of a legally binding instrument to end plastic pollution by the end of 2024. Senior HRW researcher Katharina Rall stated that “the race to tackle the plastic crisis and prevent a climate catastrophe requires every country to tackle these problems at their common source by urgently phasing out fossil fuels.” HRW also notes that fossil fuel production, the primary contributor to the global climate crisis, is “the ultimate source of plastic pollution.”


↺ DeSmog ☛ Montana Is Paying a Climate Denier to Give Expert Testimony in Upcoming Trial


Montana has hired a climate scientist turned climate contrarian to be an expert witness in an upcoming trial challenging the state’s promotion of fossil fuels.


Climatologist Judith Curry has already billed the state around $30,000 for a report filed in the case Held v. State of Montana, according to the deposition she made in December to an attorney for the 16 young Montanans suing the state. Curry also claimed that she charged $400 an hour for her consulting work, although she did not disclose the full amount Montana will pay her for appearing in court.


↺ DeSmog ☛ Breaking The Silence On Climate Change


It’s the biggest issue of our time. So why are so few of us talking about it?


In the UK, 57 percent of us talk about climate with friends and family infrequently, rarely, or never.


Energy/Transportation


↺ Scheerpost ☛ SCOTUS Case May Slash Regulation of Everything From Workers’ Rights to Clean Air


Overruling “Chevron deference” could imperil our health, safety, labor, air, water, food and environmental protections.


↺ Michael West Media ☛ Three new coal mines and a coal extension get environmental approval. What’s the scam?


No coal mine will be left behind! Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek waited until media mayhem of the Federal Budget aftermath last Tuesday to approve three new coal mines and a coal mine extension. What’s the scam?


The scam is to do it when nobody is watching, like the aftermath of the Budget when the story will get buried. In a week when Violet Coco and 7 environment activists were on a 48 hour hunger strike calling for “no new coal no new gas”, the Environment Minister quietly approved three new coal mines, a coal mine extension and there is another coal seam gas project up for approval on Friday?


Wildlife/Nature


↺ DeSmog ☛ Scientists Have Now Linked Worsening Western Wildfires to Top Polluters


New research for the first time links wildfire risks and impacts in western North America to carbon emissions traceable to the world’s largest fossil fuel and cement companies. The analysis has important implications for corporate climate accountability and may help bolster litigation aimed at holding fossil fuel producers liable for climate-related damages, the researchers say.


According to the study led by researchers at the Union of Concerned Scientists, more than a third of the total area burned by forest fires in the western United States and southwestern Canada since 1986 is attributable to the “Carbon Majors” — a term representing the 88 largest fossil fuel and cement companies that collectively have contributed a majority of the carbon emissions warming the planet.


↺ The Revelator ☛ Human Activities Have Drastically Reduced Habitat for Asian Elephants


Finance


↺ Mass layoffs continue following growth during pandemic


Jenny Craig Inc., Gap Inc., Microsoft Corp. and LinkedIn Corp. are among the new additions to the growing list of companies cutting the size of their workforce.


The layoffs come after businesses increased their hirings during the COVID-19 pandemic, when sectors such as retail generated more revenue as a result of increased spending from people working remotely. Additionally, economic uncertainty, especially with the declaration of a recession looming, is also a concern within corporations.


The unemployment rate was 3.4% in April while productivity fell by 2.7%, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.


↺ The world’s largest professional network is laying off workers


LinkedIn, the professional network that’s become a popular platform for workers to share news of their layoffs, recently announced some layoff news of its own.


↺ The Register UK ☛ Tech companies cut jobs to chase growth, but watch out for those shareholder returns


Publicly listed technology companies under pressure to make deep job cuts can underestimate the often negative impacts redundancies may cause, both financially and culturally, as well as the harm to shareholder returns.


According to data tracking service Layoffs.fyi, some 675 technology businesses have so far waved bye-bye to 193,950 employees in the year to date, compared to 164,591 chopped by 1,056 companies in 2022.


↺ The Stack ☛ A technology downturn and mass layoffs are having competing effects on FOSS


Over the past year, the technology sector has faced mass layoffs and redundancies worldwide. During 2022, there were more than 15 million layoffs in the US alone. According to data gathered on Layoffs.fyi on the technology sector, there have been more than 186,000 roles cut across 637 companies so far in 2023.


↺ Microsoft’s cost-cutting measures: More jobs on the line, no raise for staff


Microsoft has started laying off 158 employees at its headquarters in Redmond. The layoffs commenced on May 5th and were documented in a recent filing with the state Employment Security Department (ESD).


↺ The Nation ☛ Joe Biden, Culture Warrior


Joe Biden is a reluctant culture warrior. For the first half of his presidency, Biden’s theory of politics was based on the idea that Democrats could best rebuild from their losses of the last decade by winning back white working-class voters. This required focusing on bread-and-butter issues while treating culture war topics as distractions. Before the Dobbs decision last June elevated reproductive freedom to a dominant election issue, Biden was notoriously reluctant to even say the word “abortion.” Writing in The Atlantic in March, Ronald Brownstein observed that at the start of his term Biden was “betting that the non-college-educated workers, especially those who are white, who constitute the principal audience for the Republican cultural offensive will prove less receptive to those divisive messages if they feel more economically secure.”


↺ Pro Publica ☛ 5 Lives Upended After Dealing With “We Buy Ugly Houses”


HomeVestors of America, the company behind the “We Buy Ugly Houses” ads, says it’s in the business of helping people.


Sometimes, the quick cash its franchises provide in exchange for a property at vastly below market value does help the owner.


↺ Techdirt ☛ Quest To Replace Chinese Gear In U.S. Telecom Networks Is A Hot, Under-funded Mess


As the U.S. has tried to untether itself from Chinese tech, one major policy goal by both parties has been to purge U.S. telecom networks of Chinese telecom gear. The worry (sometimes substantiated, sometimes not) is that Chinese intelligence has embedded all manner of nefarious backdoors in sensitive telecommunications gear (you’re to ignore that the U.S. also routinely does this).


↺ The Nation ☛ With Lula in Charge, What’s Next for the Brazilian Left?


Brazil is the largest nation with the largest economy in Latin America. It has gone through a tumultuous transition over the past decade: from a left-leaning government to one that was right-wing and authoritarian and now back to a Workers’ Party–led coalition government under President Luis Inacio Lula de Silva. Transcribed by Jana Silverman.


AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics


↺ Counter Punch ☛ 2023-04-17 [Older] Clarence Thomas Proves It’s Time for Supreme Court Term Limits


↺ Common Dreams ☛ Erdoğan’s Hold on Power in Question as Votes Counted in Turkey


Whether Turkey’s authoritarian president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, maintains power remains an open question as officials continue to count votes following Sunday’s presidential and parliamentary elections.


↺ Democracy Now ☛ Turkey Presidential Election Heads to Runoff as Erdoğan Faces Toughest Challenge of 2-Decade Rule


Turkey’s closely watched presidential election is headed to a May 28 runoff, as both incumbent President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his main rival fell short of the 50% needed to win outright in Sunday’s vote. Erdoğan is facing his toughest challenge since coming to power 20 years ago, as opposition candidate Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu leads a broad coalition in a bid to unseat him amid criticism for his administration’s economic policies, weakening Turkey’s democracy and poor response to the deadly February earthquakes. Kılıçdaroğlu has vowed closer ties with NATO and the EU and to reinforce democratic institutions. We get an update from Istanbul with Turkish historian Kaya Genç, who says Erdoğan’s political survival was a “stunning comeback” that contradicted polls predicting a comfortable first-round victory for Kılıçdaroğlu. “This was a total shock for the Turkish establishment,” he says.


↺ Scheerpost ☛ Special Counsel Reveals 2016 Trump-Russia FBI Investigative Failure


A four-year investigation conducted by U.S. Special Counsel John Durham has concluded that the FBI lacked “actual evidence” to investigate Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and relied too heavily on unproven claims in the Steele Dossier provided by Trump’s political opponents. Here is an excerpt from the report detailing the FBI’s “confirmation bias:” “Throughout the […]


↺ Common Dreams ☛ Mothers on Six Continents Demand Action to Protect Children From Climate Crisis


From Australia to Zimbabwe, mothers on Saturday peacefully occupied public spaces and called for urgent societal transformation to avert the worst impacts of the fossil fuel-driven climate emergency.


↺ Common Dreams ☛ In Honor of Mother’s Day, Let Us Organize


To be a good mom, you have to be a great organizer. Whether it’s fair or not, in most families, moms organize just about everything—transportation to school and sporting events, shopping, meals, medical appointments, and much more. That’s why we’re the best hope for Americans who are concerned about climate change. We’re already skilled organizers. Many of us are already successfully applying our organizing skills to the climate crisis. If we want to have a planet that is safe for our kids, more of us need to do so.


↺ Common Dreams ☛ Beyond Cards and Phone Calls: Deepening Mother’s Day


The 19th century origins of Mother’s Day differ vastly in spirit and purpose from celebrations of it in the 20th and 21st centuries.


↺ JURIST ☛ Türkiye users’ access to Twitter restricted ahead of presidential election


Twitter has not made publicly available which information has been affected by this restriction on access. This is the second time this year that the use of Twitter has been limited for users based in Türkiye. In February, the government briefly blocked access to Twitter and other social media platforms in the wake of a devastating earthquake which killed almost 50,000 people.


↺ The Washington Post ☛ Twitter says it will restrict access to some tweets before Turkey’s election


The decision once again puts Twitter CEO Elon Musk’s controversial free speech policies into the spotlight. This time, critics say, he is ceding to demands from Turkey’s right-wing leader, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Much of Turkey’s media is under government control, and critics accuse Erdogan of cracking down on social media companies to stifle opposition voices as he tries to stay in power.


↺ Joinup ☛ Better legislation for smoother implementation


This session explored six elements of the Interoperable Europe Act proposal that are of particular interest to our community. These are: [...]


↺ The Nation ☛ Inside a Teamster Rebellion: This Is What Union Democracy Looks Like


In the early morning of April 12, members of International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 90 rallied in the parking lot of the United Parcel Service distribution hub in Des Moines, Iowa, to prepare for what could be the largest strike against a single company in US history later this summer. The sun was shining as the union distributed “hot dogs for breakfast” to a crowd that started small but quickly ballooned to over 100, workers said. People were standing on trucks giving speeches to their coworkers. “We had workers talking about working six days a week, talking about getting written up for calling in sick,” said Tanner Fischer, the 26-year-old president of the local, who has been working for UPS since he was 18.


↺ The Nation ☛ Introducing the 2023 Puffin Student Writing Fellows


↺ The Nation ☛ Henry Kissinger, War Criminal—Still at Large at 100


Henry Kissinger should have gone down with the rest of them: Haldeman, Ehrlichman, Mitchell, Dean, and Nixon. His fingerprints were all over Watergate. Yet he survived—largely by playing the press.1


↺ The Nation ☛ Kissinger’s Bloody Paper Trail in Chile


As Henry Kissinger reaches 100 years of age on May 27, Chileans are preparing to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the bloody military coup that the former US national security adviser helped orchestrate in September 1973. Kissinger’s controversial career is littered with scandals and crimes against humanity: support for mass murderers and torturers abroad, domestic wiretapping, clandestine wars in Indochina, and, as Greg Grandin reminds us, secretly sabotaging the quest for peace in Vietnam. But his pivotal role in the covert US efforts to undermine democracy in Chile, aiding and abetting the rise of the infamous dictator Augusto Pinochet, will always be the Achilles’ heel of Kissinger’s much-ballyhooed legacy. 1


The declassified historical record leaves no doubt that Kissinger was the chief architect of US efforts to destabilize the democratically elected government of Socialist Party leader Salvador Allende. Once Allende was overthrown, Kissinger became the leading enabler of Pinochet’s repressive new regime. “I think we should understand our policy—that however unpleasant they act, this government is better for us than Allende was,” he told his deputies as they reported to him on the human rights atrocities in the weeks following the coup. At a private June 1976 meeting with Pinochet in Santiago, Secretary of State Kissinger offered platitudes rather than pressure: “My evaluation is that you are a victim of all left-wing groups around the world,” he told Pinochet, “and that your greatest sin was that you overthrew a government which was going communist.” 2


↺ Telex (Hungary) ☛ Polish Ambassador and Hungary’s Chief of General Staff settle dispute


Gábor Böröndi, Hungarian Chief of General Staff, and Polish Ambassador Sebastian Kęciek met after Kęciek expressed his indignation at Böröndi’s words in an open letter.


↺ The Nation ☛ Marianne Williamson: From Third Way to Third Eye


The right seeks to win converts, an old political adage has it, and the left punishes heretics. Best-selling spiritual author Marianne Williamson scrambles this distinction in more ways than one. Williamson is something of an adept at conversion—having landed the imprimatur of name-brand lifestyle brokers such as Oprah Winfrey behind her justice-minded vision of ecumenical New Age faith. Last week, as Williamson set out to address a packed house at the downtown Washington franchise of Busboys and Poets, a chain of progressive minded bookstore-eateries in metro D.C., it wasn’t quite clear what sort of call to redemption was in the offing.


Misinformation/Disinformation/Propaganda


↺ The Verge ☛ Chinese authorities arrest ChatGPT user for generating fake news


The suspect, identified only by his surname Hong, is accused of using OpenAI’s chatbot to generate news articles describing a fatal train crash that officials say was “false information,” according to a police statement reported by South China Morning Post. After discovering the article on April 25th, authorities found multiple versions of the same story with different accident locations had been simultaneously posted to 20 additional accounts on Baidu-owned blogging platform Baijiahao.


↺ SCMP ☛ ChatGPT: China detains man for allegedly generating fake train crash news, first known time person held over use of AI bot


Chinese regulations that took effect in January require videos and photos made using deep synthesis tech to be clearly labelled to prevent public confusion


Censorship/Free Speech


↺ Techdirt ☛ EU Commission Asks EU Council Lawyers If Compelled Client-Side Scanning Is Legal, Gets Told It Isn’t


Lots of ideas have been floated by legislators and others in hopes of limiting the distribution of child sexual abuse material (CSAM). Very few of these ideas have been good. Most have assumed that the problem is so horrendous any efforts are justified. The problem here is that governments need to actually justify mandated mass privacy invasions, which is something that they almost always can’t do.


↺ Pro Publica ☛ Colorado Law Will Require Homes to Be More Wildfire Resistant


Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signed into law Friday a bill that mandates a statewide wildfire-resistant building code, a step that scientists say will help protect residents and first responders as climate change intensifies blazes.


The bill creates a 21-member board charged with developing standards for new and substantially remodeled homes in high-risk areas, including rules for using fire-resistant construction materials and clearing vegetation around residences. The board — which will include building industry representatives; urban and rural residents and government officials; an architect; fire officials; and insurers, among others — must be appointed by Sept. 30 and adopt a minimum building code by July 1, 2025. The law requires the code to be reviewed every three years.


↺ Stage Media Company Limited ☛ Rushdie awarded Freedom to Publish award at Nibbies


Supported by the anti-censorship organisation Index on Censorship, the award was presented to Rushdie by author Monica Ali at the British Book Awards held at Grosvenor House on Monday evening (15th May). In a video acceptance, Rushdie said: “We live in a moment, I think, at which freedom of expression, freedom to publish has not in my lifetime been under such threat in the countries of the West.


“Obviously, there are parts of the world where censorship has been prevalent for a long-time, quite a lot of the world – Russia, China, in some ways India as well. But in the countries of the West, until recently, there was a fair measure of freedom in the area of publishing. Now I am sitting here in the US, I have to look at the extraordinary attack on libraries, and books for children in schools. The attack on the idea of libraries themselves. It is quite remarkably alarming, and we need to be very aware of it, and to fight against it very hard.”


↺ Slate ☛ Elon Musk Didn’t Just Do Turkey’s Bidding. Censoring for Strongmen Is Now a Pattern.


But the timing upped the stakes here. The restrictions occurred on the eve of a highly anticipated national election, one in which incumbent Turkish strongman Recep Tayyip Erodgan faced his strongest presidential challenge in two decades. Even more on the nose, Erdogan’s newfound electoral weakness this cycle stemmed in no small part from his disastrous response to the crippling February earthquakes that leveled much of Syria and Turkey while killing more than 50,000 Turks; in the immediate aftermath, one of Erdogan’s first responses was to entirely restrict Turkish citizens’ Twitter access, as the platform was inundated with criticism of the president that one would never find on Turkey’s state-sanctioned media.


↺ Business Insider ☛ ‘Free speech opportunist’ Elon Musk caved to government pressure to censor tweets ahead of the Turkish election. Critics argue SpaceX dealings with the country’s right-wing leader may have caused the reversal.


Elon Musk’s reputation as a free speech absolutist took another hit on Saturday after Twitter sided with the Turkish government and censored the accounts of political opponents ahead of a contentious election.


In an announcement posted Friday evening, at approximately 6 a.m. in the country, Twitter’s official Global Government Affairs account declared the platform would “restrict access to some content in Turkey” in response to legal requests made of the social media site.


Freedom of Information / Freedom of the Press


↺ Meduza ☛ ‘I’m not a numerologist, but…’ Bishop Tikhon Shevkunov, reputed to be Putin’s personal confessor, presents a confused jumble of geopolitical ideas — Meduza


In a new interview with the Russian journalist Ksenia Sobchak, Orthodox Christian bishop Tikhon Shevkunov (reputed to be Vladimir Putin’s personal confessor and “spiritual guide”) shared a series of dubious and ill-founded opinions about Russia’s special place in the world, the West’s imminent clash with China, Ukraine’s doomed statehood, and other ideas barely compatible with rationality and informed governance. Paying tribute to Ksenia Sobchak’s father, the former St. Petersburg mayor Anatoly Sobchak, Shevkunov invoked Anatoly Sobchak’s prejudices against Ukraine, voiced back in 1994. Meduza has condensed Shevkunov’s remarks, keeping them in the first person and staying close to his tone and rhetoric. Here’s our summary of the opinions shared by the man entrusted with Vladimir Putin’s spiritual well-being.


↺ CNBC ☛ Vice Media files for bankruptcy to enable sale to lenders including Soros and Fortress


A consortium of Vice’s lenders which includes Fortress Investment, Soros Fund Management and Monroe Capital is looking to acquire the company following the filing.


↺ NPR ☛ Vice Media, once worth $5.7 billion, files for bankruptcy


A group of Vice lenders is set to purchase the embattled company’s assets for $225 million and take on significant liabilities, listed at $500 million to $1 billion, according to the filing in a New York federal court. That group, which includes Fortress Investment Group and Soros Fund Management, lent it $20 million to keep it afloat during the sale process, during which other lenders can make higher bids.


↺ Michael West Media ☛ “Hi Babe” Case: Commbank boss Matt Comyn revealed in payments to ASIC star witness


Commbank CEO Matt Comyn and two high-profile journalists have been dragged into ASIC’s case against bank victim advocate Geoff Shannon – along with NAB. Lisa-Jane Roberts reports startling revelations from a Southport court about dealings between big banks, the corporate regulators and the media.


The case of Crown v Shannon resumed yesterday after a 6-month adjournment was ordered to give the defence time to sift through approximately 16,000 documents that the corporate regulator ASIC, the complainant, had failed to disclose when the trial began last November.


Civil Rights/Policing


↺ Counter Punch ☛ 2023-04-27 [Older] Stop Hiring and Re-Hiring Terrible Officers


↺ Common Dreams ☛ Beware: Ron DeSantis’ Attack on Voting Rights Won’t Stay in Florida


In an increasingly unsafe and, frankly, unhinged America, one of the things that keeps me up at night is the question of whether Governor Ron DeSantis’s far-right Florida will ultimately serve as a model for a national Republican Party in charge of the entire federal government. (Legislative and executive branches aside, of course no political party is technically supposed to control the ostensibly nonpartisan judicial branch. But we all know how that’s going.)


↺ Scheerpost ☛ Title 42 Was Inhumane and Illegal. So Are Biden’s New Border Policies.


Biden’s decision to utilize and repackage rather than reject Trump’s amped-up deportation apparatus is no surprise.


↺ Techdirt ☛ Colorado’s Top Court Seems Reluctant To Give Judicial Blessing To ‘Reverse’ Keyword Search Warrants


Having figured out the internet is a great place to find things, cops are increasingly relying on warrants that target tech companies in hopes of finding suspects, rather than finding suspects first and working forward from there.


↺ Techdirt ☛ Court Suppresses Breathalyzer Results In 27,000 DUI Cases After Years Of Being Jerked Around By The State Crime Lab


For more than a decade, the Massachusetts State Police crime lab hid information from judges, prosecutors, and criminal defendants. This is nothing unusual for this state and its crime labs. The words “Massachusetts,” “crime lab,” and “scandal” have gone hand-in-hand for years.


↺ The Nation ☛ One Big Union


In Butte, Mont., masked men woke up radical labor organizer Frank Little, dragged him from their car, and then hanged his lifeless body from a railroad bridge. In Bisbee, Ariz., the county sheriff organized a gun-wielding posse that packed more than 1,000 striking miners into boxcars and sent them nearly 200 miles into the New Mexico desert without food or water. In the state of Washington, a local jury convicted several working men of murder after they defended their union hall from an armed raid by American Legionnaires, four of whom were killed in the fracas. In Chicago, a federal court found all 101 national leaders of that same union guilty of conspiring to violate the Espionage Act, passed to criminalize opposition to World War I. The trial judge sentenced most of them to lengthy terms in prison, where abuse against anti-war dissenters was common.1


↺ EFF ☛ Podcast Episode: People With Disabilities Are The Original Hackers


↺ Telex (Hungary) ☛ President Novák talks with protesting students and teachers face to face


The protesters invited President Novák to the demonstration planned for 19 May and asked her not to sign the status law, but the President said she could not promise that. After about ten minutes of debate, Novák went to the Presidential Palace, and the queuing teachers and students eventually went inside as well . There, they displayed a banner on the terrace of the palace quoting a blog post written by Katalin Novák in 2010, when she and her family were living in Germany because of her husband’s job:


↺ Telex (Hungary) ☛ Sharp increase observed in number of foreign workers in Hungary


By 2030, the Hungarian government intends to increase the number of those employed by half a million, and although it plans to do this mainly from domestic sources, statistics show that companies are increasingly relying on guest workers borrowed from abroad instead of Hungarian labourers, Népszava reports.


↺ EFF ☛ Digital Rights Updates with EFFector 35.6


Internet Policy/Net Neutrality


↺ Broadband Breakfast ☛ Learn How to Speak About Broadband, Say State Directors and Advocates at Connect (X)


Knowing how to speak about broadband with communities that we work in is an essential piece of the puzzle that can serve to complicate the process if not handled well, said Scott Woods, vice president of community engagement and strategic partnership at Ready.net.


Monopolies


↺ Computer World ☛ EU Commission OKs Microsoft’s $69B acquisition of Activision Blizzard


While the Commission said it was reassured that the commitments offered by Microsoft “fully address the competition concerns identified by the Commission,” the approval is conditional on full compliance with the commitments. An independent trustee under supervision of the Commission will be in charge of monitoring their implementation.


[...]


To remedy this, Microsoft has offered comprehensive licensing commitments over a 10-year duration that would require the company to license popular Activision Blizzard games automatically to competing cloud gaming services.


↺ Vox ☛ Microsoft’s big video game merger just got an extra life


The decision shows that, though the three countries or regions have expressed similar views about the need to rein in Big Tech’s power, they aren’t in lockstep. Microsoft may have a green light to close the deal in the EU, but it can’t actually do it without getting the same from the UK and the US. The matter is currently winding its way through the court system in the US and the UK’s decision is being appealed. While Microsoft and Activision Blizzard are both major players in the gaming industry and shouldn’t have much trouble carrying on separately, not being able to merge does hurt their ambitions to get even bigger.


When the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) rejected the Microsoft acquisition, it was because it believed it would make Microsoft too powerful in the nascent cloud gaming market, as Microsoft has the Xbox Cloud Gaming and PC Game Pass offerings, as well as the Azure cloud computing platform. The CMA cited fears that Microsoft would have to increase the price of its Game Pass subscriptions to account for the tens of billions of dollars it spent to acquire Activision, that it would make Activision’s titles exclusive to its own services, and that the games were not open to computers that didn’t have Windows operating systems.


↺ Quartz ☛ What’s next for the Microsoft-Activision deal after receiving EU approval?


Specifically, the regulators require Microsoft to automatically grant a license for Activision Blizzard games to any competing cloud-based gaming service, effectively giving consumers the right to stream any game they had already purchased on any device and using any type of operating system.


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ European Commission approves Microsoft acquisition of Activision Blizzard


Despite opposition from the UK CMA, and the ongoing legal battle in the USA, the acquisition of Activision Blizzard takes a step forward as the European Commission has approved it now.


Patents


↺ Excl: Counsel hopeful of EPO quality deal despite latest stalemate


The EPO met again with in-house counsel who are concerned that patent quality standards are slipping in favour of speedy grants


↺ Biglaw Associates Are Growing Increasingly Worried About Layoffs


You always wake up feeling ‘I could be could be next.’ It’s not at the kind of panic level right now, but a slow broil, where you feel, especially if you’re having a less busy work day, ‘what if we’re next,’ and ‘what if this quietness means that I’m useless and not contributing enough to the firm and I’m actually just dead weight that the firm needs to get rid of.’ That kind of thinking works its way into your bones.”


Trademarks


↺ Techdirt ☛ Small Cafe Changes Its Name Due To Having Spanish Word For ‘Coffee’ In Its Name


There are lots of reasons why trademark disputes get really stupid, really fast. The mother of all those reasons is, of course, the USPTO’s inability to cast a critical eye towards the applications its receives. Far too many trademarks are granted for words and terms that are not unique source-identifiers of goods and services. But one other, and I think related, common cause of stupid trademark disputes is when foreign languages get involved. What is an obviously generic or descriptive term in English suddenly confuses the examiners as the Trademark Office the moment those words are in another language.


Copyrights


↺ Lcamtuf ☛ Large language models and plagiarism


My goal here isn’t to downplay the utility of LLMs; I think they are powerful tools that will reshape the way we interact with computers and perform a variety of tasks. But I think we don’t grasp the vastness of the internet and don’t realize how often LLMs can rely on simply copying other people’s work, with some made-up padding and style transfer tricks thrown in here and there.


As a content creator, I’m not excited about this. I opted my website out from ChatGPT, which is why the chatbot can’t tell you much about vintage propaganda comics or about casting polyurethane resins into CNC-machined molds. But Google doesn’t extend the same courtesy to me: if I want to stay on the open [Internet], I gotta “consent” to Bard.


↺ Techdirt ☛ Copyright Abuses Preview A World Without Section 230


Recently artist and actor David Choe made headlines by citing alleged copyright violations to scrub the internet — including journalists’ social media accounts — of clips from a 2014 podcast where he seemingly admitted raping a masseuse. He later claimed that he made up the story for shock value and said it should be taken as performance art.


↺ Torrent Freak ☛ Major YouTube Copyright Lawsuit Nears Trial With Almost Everything On the Line


Maria Schneider’s lawsuit against YouTube alleges several types of mass copyright infringement and repeat infringer failures. The trial begins next month, with proposed jury instructions already running to 243 pages. YouTube believes it will win, but the stakes are rarely this high. In addition to damages, the plaintiffs want YouTube to disclose details of files that remain on the site after identical copies were removed due to DMCA notices. And that’s not all.


↺ Torrent Freak ☛ Copyright Alliance Backs RIAA in Key YouTube Ripper Lawsuit


The Copyright Alliance has filed an amicus curiae brief backing the RIAA in its legal battle with stream-ripping site Yout.com. The non-profit group, which represents rightsholders in key legal and policy issues, claims that numerous business models will be devastated if YouTube ripping is declared legal.


Gemini* and Gopher


Technical


↺ Going In Circles


This might be the start of a company logo from the 1980s or so? (A totally unscientific skim of BYTE magazine vol. 8, no. 8 shows various instances of horizontal lines in e.g. the IBM logo, BASF floppy drive artwork, and a few other places.)


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