-- Leo's gemini proxy

-- Connecting to gemini.techrights.org:1965...

-- Connected

-- Sending request

-- Meta line: 20 text/gemini;lang=en-GB


● 06.28.23


Gemini version available ♊︎

● Links 28/06/2023: NVK Update and Ubuntu EoL


Posted in News Roundup at 10:52 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz


GNU/Linux


Desktop/Laptop


↺ 9to5Linux ☛ New TUXEDO InfinityBook Pro 16 Linux Laptop Gets NVIDIA RTX 4000 Series GPUs


Featuring the same large, high-quality 16-inch WQHD display with a 16:10 aspect ratio and 2560×1600 pixels resolution, the InfinityBook Pro 16 Gen8 laptop is powered by an Intel Core i7-13700H processor with 14 cores, 20 threads, 24M cache, up to 5.00 GHz clock speed, and Intel Iris Xe graphics.


The Intel Core i7-13700H processor appears to be very well suited for all demanding use cases, such as gaming, but now you can order the InfinityBook Pro 16 laptop with a more powerful NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 graphics cards with 8 GB GDDR6 VRAM for unbeatable performance.


Kernel Space


↺ LWN ☛ Linux 6.3.10


↺ LWN ☛ Linux 6.1.36


↺ LWN ☛ Linux 5.15.119


↺ LWN ☛ Linux 5.10.186


↺ LWN ☛ Linux 5.4.249


↺ LWN ☛ Linux 4.19.288


↺ LWN ☛ Linux 4.14.320


Graphics Stack


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ The open source NVIDIA NVK driver is coming along well


A project I have a very keen eye on is NVK, the open source NVIDIA Vulkan driver developed by the community (not NVIDIA), and it seems like progress on it is going rather well. Developer Faith Ekstrand wrote a bit on the Collabora blog, detailing work that has been done since the original introduction post back in October last year.


↺ LWN ☛ Ekstrand: NVK update: Enabling new extensions, conformance status & more


Faith Ekstrand has provided an update on the status of the NVK Vulkan driver for NVIDIA GPUs.


↺ Collabora ☛ NVK update: Enabling new extensions, conformance status & more


It’s been a while since I’ve written about NVK. Rebecca, my intern, has written a couple of blog posts about her NVK work but I’ve been mostly quiet. Part of that is because I’ve been primarily focused on something else NVK will need but we’ll get to that in a bit. That doesn’t mean nothing has happened in NVK, though. Quite a bit has landed in the main NVK branch since October and we’re long overdue for an update.


Applications


↺ TecMint ☛ Powerline – Adds Statuslines and Prompts to Vim and Bash Shell


Powerline is a great statusline plugin for Vim editor, which is developed in Python and provides status lines and prompts for many other applications such as bash, zsh, tmux, and many more.


It enhances the appearance and functionality of the Vim editor by providing a customizable and informative status line at the bottom of the editor window, which includes current mode (e.g., normal, insert, visual), file name, path, line and column numbers, Git branch, virtual environment, and more.


Instructionals/Technical


↺ Beebom ☛ How to Make a File Executable in Linux (2023 Guide) | Beebom


Imagine a situation where you wrote an excellent script to automate a tedious task for you. But when you try to execute it in Linux, all you get is a “Permission Denied” error. Fret no more, as in this article, we will discuss two easy methods to make a file executable in Linux and avoid such permission-denied errors.


↺ It’s FOSS ☛ Bash Basics Series #3: Passing Arguments and Accepting User Inputs


Learn how to pass arguments to bash scripts and make them interactive in this chapter of the Bash Basics series.


↺ LinuxTechi ☛ How to Install PHP 8 on RHEL 8 / Rocky Linux 8 / CentOS 8


↺ Linux Handbook ☛ Trap: A Shell built-in Command


You might have come across a few shell scripts on the Internet, which are used in production, that use a keyword called trap. Naturally, you are wondering what the heck is this trap keyword, how is it useful and how do I use it in my scripts?


↺ TecMint ☛ 12 Ways to Find User Account Info and Login Details in Linux


This article will show you useful ways to find information about users on a Linux system. Here we’ll describe commands to get a user’s account details, show login details as well what users are doing on the system.


If you want to add or create users in Linux, use the useradd command, and to modify or change any attributes of an already created user account, use the usermod command via the command line.


Games


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ Open source Theme Hospital game engine CorsixTH v0.67 gets a first Beta


Oh goodie, goodbye again free time. Remember the classic Theme Hospital? CorsixTH is a free, open source and cross-platform game engine to keep it looking good on modern systems and a new release is getting close.


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ Steam Deck compatibility with Starfield to be discussed “later down the road”


Starfield is set to release on September 6th and there’s obviously a lot of excitement around it but will it work on Valve’s Steam Deck? That’s not currently clear.


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ Valve pulls in another graphics driver developer for Linux gaming


Valve clearly still have plenty of big ambitions for Linux gaming and Steam Deck, and as it turns out recently they pulled in yet another developer to work on open source graphics drivers.


↺ GamingOnLinux ☛ Steam Deck hits over 10,000 verified and playable games


A big milestone has just been hit for the Steam Deck, as there’s now over 10,000 titles rated to be either Verified or Playable. This comes nearly two months after it hit 9,000.


Desktop Environments/WMs


GNOME Desktop/GTK


↺ Tim F. Brüggemann: (Almost) Bi-weekly GSoC Update: FlatSync GSettings Integration


This post is going to cover the latest progress on FlatSync as well as my absence from bi-weekly updates and the project.


Normally, I’d write bi-weekly blog post updates regarding GSoC and FlatSync, but both my mentor and I have been very busy with university work in this month’s first week, and after that, I’ve been ill and bed-ridden for a little over a week. As a result, development stagnated in this period, so there was just nothing to write about. I’m somewhat back on my feet though, so you can expect regular updates again.


We were thrown behind quite a bit on schedule, but luckily, the still-open, expired milestone we wanted to catch up on turned out to be less work than originally planned, and we were able to fulfill it quite easily.


Distributions and Operating Systems


↺ It’s FOSS ☛ Exodia OS is a Linux Distro for Cybersecurity Enthusiasts


Are you a cybersecurity enthusiast tired of using the same old Kali Linux or other popular distros for hacking?


Well, then we have got an alternative for you that might pique your interest.


Let us take a look at Exodia OS.


↺ DebugPoint ☛ Why is Kali Linux Preferred by Hackers?


Kali Linux is a Debian “testing” based Linux operating system created almost a decade ago. Over the last few years has gained significant popularity among hackers and cybersecurity professionals. With the ever-increasing dependency on digital infrastructures and ever-growing online threats, cybersecurity has become more relevant today for average users and businesses.


Here are a few points why Kali Linux is used by most of the hackers and pen testers.


BSD


↺ Vermaden ☛ FreeBSD Jails Containers


FreeBSD networking and containers (Jails) stacks are very mature and provide lots of useful features … yet for some reason these features are not properly advertised by the FreeBSD project … or not even documented at all. I remember when Solaris was still under Sun before ‘fatal’ 2008 Oracle acquisition and one of the advertised Solaris features was its networking capabilities – along with virtual switches etc. that were administrated with the ipadm(1M) and dladm(1M) commands. FreeBSD while having technologies like Netgraph or Jails lightweight containers – along with VNET Jails that have full independent of the host virtual network stack … almost does not advertise them at all. The VNET Jails – while being production ready and used by thousands of sysadmins – are still not documented in the FreeBSD Handbook or FreeBSD FAQ at all … you will not be able to find a single VNET mention in the FreeBSD Handbook. Even the FreeBSD Man Pages like jail.conf(5) does not mention it – only jail(8)partially mentions VNET feature.


↺ Klara ☛ Linux vs. FreeBSD: Linux and FreeBSD Firewalls – The Ultimate Guide, Part 2


In the first article of this series, we covered the major differences between two types of firewalls platforms – either Linux or FreeBSD based and what the options are. We covered how pf, IPFW, iptables and nftables act when actions are applied to different packages and just in general the differences between deploying a FreeBSD-based firewall and a Linux-based firewall. In the second part, we go a bit deeper and discuss how egress filtering is done, and how tables and sets are built.


Fedora Family / IBM


↺ Web Pro News ☛ Linux Distro Reviews: Fedora — The Distro In Red Hat’s Shadow


Fedora is the community-driven upstream distro of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). As such, it serves as the testing ground for the various features and technology that will eventually become RHEL.


As such, Fedora tends to move faster than many distros in adopting new technologies. Pipewire, Wayland, and immutability are just a few of the technologies that Fedora has adopted and pushed before many other distros. Because of this, Fedora is often referred to as a “cutting-edge” distro.


Obviously, being upstream of Red Hat means that Fedora uses RPM packages, not the DEB packages of the Debian/Ubuntu family. While not quite as popular as DEB packages, RPM easily offers the second-largest adoption rate among developers. If a developer only plans to target one family of Linux distros, it will be Debian/Ubuntu. If they target two, however, you can bet Red Hat/Fedora will be the second.


↺ InfoWorld ☛ Red Hat ends the RHEL clones’ free lunch


For decades Red Hat has led the enterprise Linux market, but as popular as its eponymous Linux distribution might be, CentOS 7 is orders of magnitude more widely used—20 times as popular, by my back-of-the-envelope estimate. And while CentOS once masqueraded as a Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) clone, the company changed all that in late 2020 with the introduction of CentOS Stream. So far, so good, so what, right?


Wrong. Red Hat announced that CentOS 7 will be end-of-lifed in June 2024 (goodbye security patches and software updates). More recently, Red Hat announced that CentOS Stream will now be the sole repository for public RHEL-related source code releases. For enterprises doing long-term IT planning, which is almost any enterprise of reasonable size, now is the time to consider what to do post-CentOS 7.


↺ Slashdot ☛ EOL For Red Hat 7 and CentOS 7 In 1 Year and a Week


↺ 9to5Linux ☛ Fedora Linux 39 Workstation to Ship with a More Modern Installer


As you may have heard, Fedora Project’s Anaconda team has been working on a new web-based installer for desktop users that promises to offer a much better and more polished user experience. The new installer is called Anaconda WebUI and a new change proposal aims to include it by default in Fedora Linux 39 Workstation.


The Anaconda WebUI installer is not yet full-featured, that’s why the Fedora Project decided to implement it only in Fedora Workstation, the flagship edition featuring the GNOME desktop environment, to get some feedback from users so that they can continue to improve the installation experience.


↺ OMG! Linux ☛ Fedora Workstation 39 May Use Web-Based Installer


Lest anyone panic I must stress that “web-based” does not mean “requires [Internet]”. Nor does it mean losing out on any of Anaconda’s existing install features.


Not only does the new Anaconda WebUI have feature parity with the existing GTK3-based UI but also nixes longstanding issues, like a hard dependency on X for keyboard switching, insecure remote access (VNC), and an outdated UX.


Canonical/Ubuntu Family


↺ Make Use Of ☛ 5 Reasons Why Ubuntu Cinnamon Is Better Than Other Ubuntu Flavors


Cinnamon has what many people consider a traditional user interface. It’s the desktop paradigm that Windows has used for decades. There is a taskbar across the bottom, a menu in the bottom left for launching applications, and a system tray in the bottom right next to a clock.


You can create folders on the desktop or sprinkle files all over the screen, or use the area to store app icons. The layout is so familiar that non-technical computer users may not realize they’re running anything other than Windows (at least until the time comes to install software). And many in the know still appreciate that they can have the benefits of Linux without having to completely change how they use a computer.


Kubuntu, another Ubuntu flavor, may also look like Windows at first blush, but there are many moving parts to its KDE Plasma desktop.


Unlike Windows, Plasma can be molded largely into what you want it to be. This configurability is a big way KDE Plasma shows how fun computing can be, and it allows you to stray very far from the default experience. Cinnamon is somewhat customizable, but it never gets too far from feeling like Windows.


↺ OMG Ubuntu ☛ Death is Coming for Ubuntu 22.10 – Upgrade Soon!


Those without a calendar to gawp at should know that this is less than a month way away at the time of writing.


But don’t panic (though I admit my headline doesn’t help in that regard).


You can upgrade to Ubuntu 23.04 in-place, without needing to reinstall from scratch. Barring the 25 mins or so the process takes, it’s a painless procedure (note: you may need to manually re-enable any PPAs or 3rd-party repos you make use of, but that’s true of any upgrade).


Support for Ubuntu 23.04 ‘Lunar Lobster’ ends in January of next year. This might be a little sooner than you want given, y’know, you’ve only just made the move on up to it.


↺ Ubuntu ☛ Improving snap maintenance with automation


As the number of snaps increases, the need for automation grows. Any automation to help us maintain a group of snaps is welcome and necessary for us to be able to scale. The solution detailed in this article has two main benefits:


↺ Ubuntu ☛ Canonical Joins Eclipse Adoptium Working Group to Strengthen Commitment to Open Source Java Runtimes


Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, is thrilled to announce its membership of the Eclipse Adoptium Working Group. As an esteemed project under the Eclipse Foundation, the Adoptium Working Group brings together renowned OpenJDK builders and distributors such as Alibaba, Azul, Huawei, IBM, Microsoft, Red Hat, Rivos, and, most recently, Google. Through membership of the working group, Canonical is strengthening its dedication to making the Java toolchain a first-class solution on Ubuntu, while providing open-source licensed, free-to-use, and high-quality builds of OpenJDK.


The Eclipse Adoptium Working Group is a collaborative platform that fosters innovation and promotes the development and distribution of Java toolchains based on the OpenJDK project. By joining forces with like-minded entities within the Java ecosystem, Canonical will continue to advance, promote and disseminate high-quality toolchains and related technologies across the Java community.


Devices/Embedded


↺ [Old] Wired ☛ The Internet of Things Is Wildly Insecure — And Often Unpatchable


But this time the problem is much worse, because the world is different: All of these devices are connected to the Internet. The computers in our routers and modems are much more powerful than the PCs of the mid-1990s, and the Internet of Things will put computers into all sorts of consumer devices. The industries producing these devices are even less capable of fixing the problem than the PC and software industries were.


↺ Linux Gizmos ☛ ICP introduces EPIC SBC with Alder Lake-P processors


ICP presented today the NANO-ADL-P single board computer which is designed to deliver high-performance in a compact form factor. The device comes with up to 16GB RAM, dual 2.5 GbE LAN ports, and multiple display interfaces.


Open Hardware/Modding


↺ Tom’s Hardware ☛ Raspberry Pi E Ink Frames Keep Loved Ones Connected


The project is made using two custom digital picture frames, each featuring a Raspberry Pi and an E Ink display panel. The Pis connect to the internet throughout the day and pull a new image to be loaded from a specific email address. This makes it possible to send new pictures to each other every day by just sending them as an attachment with a custom message to be overlayed.


↺ Olimex ☛ Running Linux with kernel 6.3 on Open Source Hardware board with ESP32-S3!


Few days ago I spotted on Twitter that there is possible to run Linux on ESP32-S3.


It was good timing as our new EUR 12.00 ESP32-S3-DevKit-Lipo board just hit the mass production, so I got one board and try to replicate the results.


↺ Olimex ☛ ESP32-SBC-FabGL update – now you can play Invaders with Wii Nunchuck via the UEXT port!


The Invader game is part of FabGL library, made originally in odd resolution 320×200 pixels which is not visible on our VGA monitor. We changed the resolution to 320×240 pixels which sync to 640×480 standard VGA mode and we finally could play it!


↺ Tom’s Hardware ☛ This Mac II Emulator Runs on Pocket C.H.I.P.


Paul Rickards, aka Biosrhythm, shows off how to set up Mac II emulator Mini VMac on a portable PocketCHIP board.


Mobile Systems/Mobile Applications


↺ Hackaday ☛ An Android Phone Powers A Self Driving Car | Hackaday


↺ India Times ☛ Android Logo: Google’s Android is getting ‘new brand identity’: All details here – Times of India


↺ Phone Arena ☛ Get your hands on the king of all Android tablets; snag a Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra at a sweet discount from Best Buy – PhoneArena


↺ Android Police ☛ Android is changing its brand identity once again


↺ Android Police ☛ Android could soon let you move calls between your phone and tablet seamlessly


↺ SamMobile ☛ Samsung Galaxy S22, Z Fold 4 Android 14 update being tested for US versions – SamMobile


↺ The Hindu ☛ Today’s Cache | Baidu’s AI claims; Google’s Android antitrust woes; Qualcomm launches new 5G SoC – The Hindu


↺ The Hindu ☛ Five points to keep personal data safe in Android smartphones – The Hindu


↺ Tom’s Guide ☛ Dangerous Android trojan targets 600 banking apps — and it’s draining accounts | Tom’s Guide


↺ The Sun ☛ Warning for Android owners over sinister new ‘bank-raiding’ apps – check your device today | The US Sun


↺ Mirror UK ☛ Urgent Android warning for all UK phone owners – delete these apps now or pay a heavy price – Mirror Online


↺ Phone Arena ☛ Android banking trojan wants to drain your online bank account; delete these five apps now! – PhoneArena


↺ Reuters ☛ Google asks India’s top court to quash Android antitrust directives | Reuters


↺ Giz China ☛ When’s the Right Time to Upgrade Your Android Phone? Look for These Signs – Gizchina.com


↺ India Times ☛ Google: Google removes trojan-laden Android apps from Play Store: How they affected users – Times of India


↺ Make Use Of ☛ How to Set Up Bedtime Mode or Sleep Mode on Android


↺ Make Use Of ☛ How to Create Unique Cinematic Wallpapers From Your Photos on Android


↺ Android Police ☛ Here’s how Android will protect you from AirTag stalking


↺ Giz China ☛ Android is easier to use than iOS – new study claim: True or False?


↺ Liliputing ☛ TCL Tab 10 Gen 2 budget Android tablet coming soon – Liliputing


↺ Android Central ☛ The new Snapdragon 4 Gen 2 will supercharge budget Android phones | Android Central


↺ Phone Arena ☛ Pixel 8: The best Android flagship this year might also be the worst one – Google decides – PhoneArena


↺ 9to5Google ☛ Boox Tab Mini C: Compact color e-ink Android tablet


↺ Notebook Check ☛ MIUI 14.1: Xiaomi to bring Android 14 update to only a few models – NotebookCheck.net News


↺ The Verge ☛ Android SOS feature blamed for rise in false emergency calls in the UK – The Verge


↺ Forbes ☛ Interview: What Lies Behind The Return Of The Android Tablet?


Free, Libre, and Open Source Software


↺ OMG! Linux ☛ Libreboot, the FOSS BIOS Replacement, Sees New Release


Unlike other boot firmware, Libreboot is entirely free of proprietary blobs, is free to inspect, modify, and redistribute. It also boasts solid support for booting Linux-based distros, as well as OpenBSD and FreeBSD.


Web Browsers/Web Servers


Mozilla


↺ Mozilla ☛ Signing in to Pocket just got even more secure


The Pocket app and web experience are trusted by millions of people everyday to stay up to date and informed on the topics they care about most, free from clickbait, fake news and the pressure and anxiety often felt while on social media platforms. Since being acquired in 2017, Pocket is part of the family of products made by Mozilla, the nonprofit-backed tech company building responsible technology that prioritizes people over profits, so internet safety and security are top of mind for our customers.


↺ Mozilla ☛ Challenge the default with Firefox


In our ever faster and more overwhelming online lives, we’ve learned to settle for the obvious choices — the ones we’re made to believe are practical and right for us. Our phones come with pre-installed apps, our laptops have their own browsers. But in real life, we can choose to go to our local ethical store, choose which school to send our children to, or decide to travel by train. So why should this choice be taken away from us online? Why can’t we pick technology that feels more like us and what we stand for?


SaaS/Back End/Databases


↺ Peter Eisentraut ☛ PostgreSQL compile times: Meson review


In a recent article, I compared the compilation times of PostgreSQL using different compilers. In the comments, I was asked for numbers for the new Meson build machinery. Let’s do that now.


(Of course, when we are testing the compilation step, we are not really using Meson much but rather Ninja operating on build description files produced by Meson.)


We have to consider how we can make both build systems build approximately the same set of files, to make this a fair comparison. I’m going to use make world-bin on the make side, which builds the same things as meson compile on the meson side (that is, core, contrib, but not documentation). Also, I’m configuring with plain configure without options and with meson setup –auto-features=disabled, in order to get approximately the same build configuration. Finally, I’m running the configure and make build in a separate build directory, to match the meson build, just in case that matters. Beyond that, the methodology is the same as in the previous article.


Education


↺ Raspberry Pi ☛ Join London’s hybrid Raspberry Pi live event


If you attend or host a Raspberry Pi-focused meet-up that we haven’t yet listed, scroll to the bottom of this page to let us know some details and we’ll put out the Pi signal to alert others near you.


Programming/Development


↺ Hackaday ☛ A Browser Approach To Parsing


There are few rites of programmer passage as iconic as writing your first parser. You might want to interpret or compile a scripting language, or you might want to accept natural-language-like commands. You need a parser. [Varunramesh] wants to show you parser combinators, a technique used to make practical parsers. But the demonstration using interactive code cells in the web page is nearly as interesting as the technique.


↺ Geeks For Geeks ☛ Relative Importance Analysis in R


A statistical method called relative importance analysis (RIA) is used to assess the relative contribution of independent variables to the variance of a dependent variable.


↺ [Repeat] Buttondown ☛ Maybe Software Engineers could learn something from Linguistics


Unlike most languages, Alloy has two notions of subtyping: a type (or “signature”) can be extended, which is exclusive, or they can be in, which are stackable. In this example, the source can be generic, a database, or a file, but not all three. The Step can be generic, an extraction step, a load step, or both:1 [...]


↺ Jamie Brandon ☛ 0037: dynamic mutable value semantics, interior pointers, uninterning, functionless effects, papers, books


I worked through a simple implementation of mutable value semantics here (tree-walking interpreter, no optimizations). The main difference from swiftlet/val is that it’s a dynamic language – demonstrating that nothing about MVS requires static typing.


↺ Rlang ☛ A Journey through Arrow in R


Apache Arrow is a software development platform for building high performance applications that process and transport large data sets. It is designed to improve the performance of data analysis methods, and to increase the efficiency of moving data from one system or programming language to another.


In this community call moderated by Stephanie Hazlitt, our speakers, Nic Crane and Jonathan Keane, will lead us through the Arrow R package.


↺ Jay Little ☛ Developing Custom Software is Probably a Bad Idea


This post is the culmination of years of accumulated professional frustration. It will not be well received by some. That’s okay. If you make it to the 25 year point of your dev career and you spent most of that time writing custom software for clients and you still disagree, feel free to write your own take and send it along to me. I will afford it my due consideration.


That isn’t me gate keeping or trying to make an argument based solely on an appeal to my own authority. I’m just pointing out that I have watched a lot of clients break themselves against the rocks of custom software development and over time the accumulated weight of their trials, tribulations and in some cases, overt failures, has begun to weigh upon my soul. The purpose of this post is to discuss some of this at a high level and explain why I now believe custom software is not a good option for most.


Python


↺ Geeks For Geeks ☛ Python Array length


In Python, the length of an array can be obtained using the len() function.


↺ University of Toronto ☛ Belatedly remembering to use the two expression form of Python’s assert


Today I confessed on the Fediverse that I had somehow mentally overwritten what I once knew about Python’s assert with a C-like version that I wrote as ‘assert(expression)’ (which I apparently started doing more than a decade ago). What caused me to notice this was that I was revising some Python code to cope with a new situation, and I decided I wanted to fail in some way if an impossible thing turned out to not be as impossible as I thought. This wasn’t an error that should be returned normally, and it wasn’t really something I wanted to raise as an assertion, so adding an assert was the easy way.


Shell/Bash/Zsh/Ksh


↺ Earthly ☛ Navigating Directories Like a Pro with Bash pushd and popd


If you answered yes, then it’s the perfect time to learn two more bash commands: pushd and popd. In this article, you’ll learn how pushd and popd work, as well as a couple of alternative commands. By the end of this article, you’ll have added two more useful commands to your repertoire.


↺ Linux Handbook ☛ Read File Line by Line in Bash


You may find yourself in a situation where you want to use a shell script to read files line by line.


Standards/Consortia


↺ Walled Culture ☛ Top EU court advisor says technical standards, like laws, should not be locked down by copyright


One of the most pernicious ideas that copyright maximalism has spread is that preventing people from freely accessing creative material is not just a good thing to do, but should be the natural state of affairs. This has made questioning whether copyright is really the best way to support artists and promote creativity hard. Against that background, there’s an interesting opinion from one of the top EU court’s special advisers, known as advocates general, suggesting a situation in which copyright definitely should not be applied. The Court of Justice of the European Union’s press release explains the background: [...]


Leftovers


↺ The Nation ☛ Secret Histories


An assassin works from a partial understanding of the world. If not literally a hashishi, as suggested by the word’s etymology, an assassin must nevertheless see the world in tunnel vision, his victim viewed through the lens of a scope. The vast, complex network of humanity to which he and his victim belong, with contending narratives and blurred individual motives, cannot be allowed to exist. To do so would be to fail as an assassin.


↺ [Repeat] The Strategist ☛ From the bookshelf: ‘The ghost at the feast’


America’s record as an ambivalent and erratic liberal hegemon has deep roots, as analysed by Robert Kagan in The ghost at the feast: America and the collapse of world order, 1900–1941.


Science


↺ Vice Media Group ☛ Human Relatives Were Butchering and Eating Each Other 1.45 Million Years Ago


Cut marks on an ancient shin bone are the earliest evidence that early human relatives defleshed each others’ corpses, and likely feasted on the remains.


Education


↺ The Nation ☛ School Zone


↺ David Rosenthal ☛ The Philosopher of Palo Alto


As I was at the time a member of “staff in some other department” at Sun Microsystems and then Nvidia, below the fold I discuss some of the “practicalities” that should have been faced earlier rather than later or not at all.


Hardware


↺ The Atlantic ☛ There Will Never Be Another Second Life


The virtual world, a strange cross between Burning Man and Neal Stephenson’s metaverse, marks its 20th anniversary with no true corporate competitor in sight.


↺ Dedoimedo ☛ The Slimbook is dead, long live the Slimbook


This be a short article for now, but I’ll save the details for when the laptop actually arrives. I am happy to have bought myself a new toy, but the impetus for the purchase wasn’t really a happy one, so I don’t have this amazing, giddy feeling bubbling inside me. I also didn’t spend a great deal of time reading reviews and comparing products, one because I like and know Slimbook’s offerings, and two because I didn’t think I’d come to any wiser conclusion than the one I already have. Linux-friendly systems are all much alike, they do cost a bit more than the generic off-the-shelf Windows-powered system, but hey.


Well, now we shall wait. I do have a question for you though, if you feel like sending an old-fashioned email. Do you think I ought to re-use all of the Slimbook Pro2′s user settings and desktop configurations, or simply start fresh, create a brand new setup, and then just copy the actual user data? If you have an idea or a suggestion, feel free to ping me. Stay tuned for updates.


[...]


But then, I noticed that the case was actually warped. The entire left side was thicker than the right side, and the abnormality was slowly, but steadily growing. I figured that my laptop’s battery was bulging! As I’ve already told you in my recent Slimbook & Kubuntu 22.04 upgrade article, I was worried the battery may cause problems down the road. It did, and much sooner than I expected, and in a more destructive way than I’d have liked. As one does with devices with Lithium-ion batteries, I let it drain and powered the machine off. And then went searching for a replacement.


↺ The Drone Girl ☛ How these drones survey underwater — without actually going underwater


With the Bathydrone system, a drone drags a small vessel on the water’s surface. That vessel is equipped with a commercially-available, off-the-shelf sonar unit mounted on its bottom.


And it’s that sonar unit that has down-scan, side-scan, and chirp capabilities, making it possible to log data onboard the console, which is located inside the hull. After the drone’s flight and the sonar unit is retrieved, data can then be uploaded post-mission from the console.


Health/Nutrition/Agriculture


↺ Matt Rickard ☛ Dark Patterns


Dark patterns are design tactics used in websites that manipulate users into doing something they didn’t intend to do.


A list of dark patterns I’ve come across.


↺ Pro Publica ☛ Inside the Secretive World of Penile Enlargement


They wanted it because they’d just gone through a bad breakup and needed an edge in the volatile dating market; because porn had warped their sense of scale; because they’d been in a car accident, or were looking to fix a curve, or were hoping for a little “soft­ware upgrade”; because they were not having a midlife crisis; because they were, “and it was cheaper than a Bugatti Veyron”; because, after five kids, their wife couldn’t feel them anymore; because they’d been molested as a child and still remembered the laughter of the adults in the room; because they couldn’t forget a passing comment their spouse made in 1975; because, despite the objections of their couples therapist, they believed it would bring them closer to their “sex ­obsessed” husband (who then had an affair that precipitated their divorce); because they’d stopped changing in locker rooms, stopped peeing in urinals, stopped having sex; be­cause who wouldn’t want it?


Mick (his middle name) wanted a bigger penis because he believed it would allow him to look in the mirror and feel satisfied. He had trouble imagining what shape the satisfaction would take, since it was something he’d never actually experienced. Small and dark haired, he’d found his adolescence to be a gantlet of humiliating comparisons: to classmates who were blond and blue-­eyed; to his half brothers, who were older and taller and heterosexual; to the hirsute men in his stepfather’s Hasidic community, who wore big beards and billowing frock coats. After he reached puberty — late, in his estimation — he grew an impressive beard of his own, and his feelings of inadequacy concentrated on his genitals.


↺ Hackaday ☛ MIT Engineers Pioneer Cost-Effective Protein Purification For Cheaper Drugs


There are a wide variety of protein-based drugs that are used to treat various serious conditions. Insulin is perhaps the most well-known example, which is used for life-saving treatments for diabetes. New antibody treatments also fall into this category, as do various vaccines.


↺ Hackaday ☛ Dentist Tool Hardware Inspires Non-Slip Probe Tips


Cross-pollination between different industries can yield interesting innovations, and a few years ago [John Wiltrout] developed some non-slip meter probe adapters. He recently used our tips line to share some details that you won’t see elsewhere, letting us know how the idea came to be.


↺ YLE ☛ Nurse shortage eats away at ward beds


Around half of the wellbeing services counties that took part in Yle’s survey report closing some of their wards due to a lack of staff.


↺ The Straits Times ☛ Jumbo problem: Sri Lanka’s battle with plastic pollution


Officials say a law banning single-use plastics may come into force within weeks.


↺ teleSUR ☛ UN Report Sounds Alarm on Surging Global Drug Use


The number of people suffering from drug use disorders has skyrocketed to 39.5 million globally, a surge of 45 percent over the decade.


↺ The Atlantic ☛ Dear Therapist: I’ve Been Dumped by My Friends


I thought our shared history would keep us close, but it hasn’t.


↺ New Yorker ☛ How Plastics Are Poisoning Us


They both release and attract toxic chemicals, and appear everywhere from human placentas to chasms thirty-six thousand feet beneath the sea. Will we ever be rid of them?


↺ New Yorker ☛ A Year of Change for a North Dakota Abortion Clinic


After the Dobbs decision that reversed Roe v. Wade, North Dakota and thirteen other states banned most abortions. Emily Witt visits one clinic that managed to move across state lines.


↺ New Yorker ☛ The Perils and Promises of Penis-Enlargement Surgery


One doctor’s Promethean quest to grow the male member is leaving some men desperate and disfigured.


Proprietary/Artificial Intelligence (AI)


↺ DroidGazzette ☛ Outlook for the web outage impacts users across America


Some South American users also say they’re having issues with the Outlook desktop application, which crashes when launched.


Windows TCO


↺ Scoop News Group ☛ Two major energy corporations added to growing MOVEit victim list


Since the Russian-speaking CL0P began publicizing its victims, state and local governments appear to have been heavily affected by the campaign as at least seven have been hit, including the nation’s largest public-employee pension fund the California Public Employees’ Retirement System. Over the weekend, around 45,000 New York City public school students had their personal data stolen which included information like Social Security numbers, StateScoop reported.


Security


↺ IT Wire ☛ APRA takes action against Medibank over October ransomware attack


“Since launching the 2020-2024 Cyber Security Strategy, APRA has repeatedly stressed the importance of an uplift in cyber security and continued vigilance to identify and address cyber exposures.


“Unfortunately, not all entities are heeding these messages as we continue to identify poor cyber security practices and inadequate oversight from boards and management,” Smith said.


In response, Medibank said in a note sent to the ASX that it had sufficient capital to meet the increase.


It said after application of this requirement the company would remain well capitalised with unallocated capital remaining at 30 June 2022 levels: $148 million. Given this, the company said it would not reduce its target health insurance required capital ratio.


Medibank chief executive David Koczkar said: “Safeguarding customer data is a responsibility Medibank takes very seriously.


“Medibank has continued to strengthen our systems and processes to provide our customers with the security they expect and deserve. We will continue to work to enhance our systems and processes even further. Our company remains strong and well capitalised.


“We continue to support our customers through the Medibank Cyber Response Support Program, which includes mental health and well-being support, identity protection and financial hardship measures.”


↺ SANS ☛ The Importance of Malware Triage, (Tue, Jun 27th)


When dealing with malware analysis, you like to get “fresh meat”. Just for hunting purposes or when investigating incidents in your organization, it’s essential to have a triage process to reduce the noise and focus on really interesting files. For example, if you detect a new sample of Agent Tesla, you don’t need to take time to investigate it deeply. Just extract IOCs to share with your colleagues. From a business point of view, you don’t have time to analyze all samples!


↺ LWN ☛ Security updates for Tuesday [LWN.net]


Security updates have been issued by Debian (c-ares and libx11), Fedora (chromium and kubernetes), Red Hat (python3 and python38:3.8, python38-devel:3.8), and SUSE (amazon-ssm-agent, kernel, kubernetes1.24, libvirt, nodejs16, openssl-1_1, and webkit2gtk3).


↺ TechCrunch ☛ LetMeSpy, a phone tracking app spying on thousands, says it was hacked


A hacker has stolen the messages, call logs and locations intercepted by a widely used phone monitoring app called LetMeSpy, according to the company that makes the spyware.


The phone monitoring app, which is used to spy on thousands of people using Android phones around the world, said in a notice on its login page that on June 21, “a security incident occurred involving obtaining unauthorized access to the data of website users​​.”


↺ Silicon Angle ☛ American and Southwest Airlines pilot data breached in hack of third-party provider


Pilot data relating to American Airlines Group Inc. and Southwest Airlines Co. has been breached following the hack of a third-party provider of pilot applications and recruitment. The breach involved the compromise of a company called Pilot Credentials between April 30 and May 1, with the airlines informed on May 3.


↺ Bruce Schneier ☛ Excel Data Forensics


In this detailed article about academic plagiarism are some interesting details about how to do data forensics on Excel files. It really needs the graphics to understand, so see the description at the link.


(And, yes, an author of a paper on dishonesty is being accused of dishonesty. There’s more evidence.)


Integrity/Availability/Authenticity


↺ The Register UK ☛ Warning: JavaScript registry npm vulnerable to ‘manifest confusion’ abuse


“The issue at hand is that the version metadata (a.k.a. ‘manifest data’) is submitted independent from the attached tarball which houses the package’s package.json,” he explains. “These two pieces of information are never validated against one another and [this] calls into question which one should be the canonical source of truth for data such as dependencies, scripts, license, and more.”


↺ Alex Ellis ☛ What if your Pods need to trust self-signed certificates?


Why? Because whilst the data may be encrypted using a TLS certificate, there is no verification – so you could be using a TLS certificate that is compromised or that was injected into the data path by an attacker.


So the usual answer for this on a Linux system is to: download the trust bundle for the certificate, add it to a set folder, and to run a command to install it.


Privacy/Surveillance


↺ OpenRightsGroup ☛ Online Safety Bill: International organisations, academics and cyber experts urge UK government to protect encrypted messaging


Safeguard private communication Over 80 civil society organisations, academics and cyber experts from 23 countries have written to the UK government to raise the alarm about proposed powers in the Online Safety Bill.


↺ EDRI ☛ Online Safety Bill insecure: international organisations, academics and cyber experts urge UK government to protect encrypted messaging


EDRi, Open Rights Group and over 80 civil society organisations, academics and cyber experts from 23 countries have written to the UK government to raise the alarm about proposed powers in the Online Safety Bill.


Confidentiality


↺ APNIC ☛ Whose certificate is it anyway?


This is the third blog post on the topic of the centralization of the Internet. The first post discussed the diversity of authoritative name servers, and the second post discussed the diversity of MX records.


Defence/Aggression


↺ RIPE ☛ Insights from the World’s Largest Cyber Defence Exercise


We spoke with Patrik and Tomas to find out more about the experience: how did it feel to work under that level of stress, what lessons did they learn, and what surprises did they encounter along the way?


↺ New York Times ☛ After Montana Banned TikTok, Users Sued. TikTok Is Footing Their Bill.


The popular video service had deflected questions about its involvement in the creators’ lawsuit for more than a month.


[...]


While TikTok is funding the lawsuit, the creators said, the company is not paying them directly for their role.


↺ Quartz ☛ The US Supreme Court struck down a GOP effort to subvert elections


Writing the majority opinion for a 6-3 decision (pdf), chief justice John Roberts wrote that the US Constitution does not “insulate” state legislatures from judicial review.


The decision was an indictment of the independent state legislature theory, a radical interpretation of the US Constitution’s elections clause that claims state legislatures should have unilateral control over elections. The June 27 ruling essentially establishes that courts have the authority to weigh in on the legality of state election regulations.


↺ Hackaday ☛ Escalate The NERF Arms Race With Self-Firing Missiles


NERF guns are a toy that appeals to adults and youngsters alike — if you’ve never had the chance to pelt your friends with safe and kid friendly foam darts in a surprise ambush, you haven’t lived. But just as with real-world weapons of the type superpowers put in shows of military strength, there’s an arms race in the world of NERF. Mere darts aren’t enough, and there’s a range of missiles for the bellicose youngster intent on skirting the brink of global foam dart annihilation. These come with a catch though in the shape of a lackluster launcher, and this has prompted [Joel Creates] to create a self-firing NERF missile with a secondary rocket motor.


↺ New York Times ☛ Murders, on the Decline


The recent spike in murders already seems to be over.


↺ New York Times ☛ 14-Story Building Collapses in Alexandria, Egypt


The collapse is one of a several similar disasters in Egypt in recent years. Rescuers were trying to determine if more people were trapped under the rubble.


↺ Federal News Network ☛ Couple celebrating 50th wedding anniversary are stabbed to death


Authorities announced late Monday that they had arrested a 41-year-old man in the weekend killing of a Massachusetts couple celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary, along with another family member, in the small city outside Boston. Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan announced police took Christopher Ferguson, of Newton, into custody Monday evening and charged him the killing of 73-year-old Gilda “Jill” D’Amore after an autopsy revealed she had died from a homicide. Additional charges were expected in the death of 74-year-old Bruno D’Amore and Jill’s mother, 97-year-old Lucia Arpino, Tuesday after those autopsies have been completed.


↺ RFA ☛ As US aircraft carrier docks in Da Nang, Vietnamese premier visits Beijing


The events illustrate Hanoi’s flexible ‘bamboo foreign policy,’ expert says.


↺ RFERL ☛ Three Kosovar Police Officers Released Following Serbian Court Order


A Serbian court has ordered the release of three Kosovar policemen detained on June 16 along the border between the two countries in an incident that heightened tensions between Belgrade and Pristina.


↺ New York Times ☛ Conditions at Guantánamo Are Cruel and Inhuman, U.N. Investigation Finds


The report was the result of the first visit by an independent human rights investigator to the prison in its two-decade history.


↺ France24 ☛ UN experts say treatment of Guantanamo detainees is ‘inhuman and degrading’


With nearly constant surveillance, gruelling isolation and limited family access, the treatment of the last 30 Guantanamo detainees is “cruel, inhuman and degrading,” UN rights experts said Monday as they reported on their first visit to the US military prison.


↺ teleSUR ☛ UN Expert Denounces US Torture of Guantánamo Detainees


The U.S. Naval Base prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, opened in January 2002, during the presidency of George W. Bush.


↺ Federal News Network ☛ First UN investigator at US detention center at Guantanamo says detainees face cruel treatment


The first U.N. independent investigator to visit the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay says the 30 men held there are subject “to ongoing cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment under international law.” Irish law professor Fionnuala Ní Aoláin called the American government’s use of torture against them “a betrayal” of the rights of victims and survivors of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the United States to justice. She told a news conference Monday about her 23-page report that the 2001 attacks in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania that killed nearly 3,000 people were “crimes against humanity.” But she said the U.S. use of torture and rendition against alleged perpetrators and their associates in the aftermath violated international human rights law.


↺ New York Times ☛ A Grave Escalation in the West Bank


Ultranationalist West Bank settlers who have recently attacked Palestinian towns and villages seem to want to wedge out their Palestinian neighbors.


↺ New York Times ☛ Prosecutors to Seek Death Penalty for Idaho Murders Suspect Bryan Kohberger


The top prosecutor in Latah County said the November killings met the standard for the kind of aggravating factors that warrant seeking the death penalty.


War in Ukraine


↺ CS Monitor ☛ After the rebellion, how well will Putin carry on his rule?


Yevgeny Prigozhin’s attempted rebellion didn’t topple President Vladimir Putin. But in its aftermath, it has launched debate over just how stable Mr. Putin’s hold on the country really is.


↺ LRT ☛ After Prigozhin’s retreat to Belarus, Lithuania has to prepare for hostile actions – official


If Wagner forces are stationed in Belarus, just across the border from Lithuania, Vilnius will have to prepare for possible hybrid actions of the mercenary group, says an adviser to Lithuanian President Gitanas Nausėda.


Environment


↺ Gizmodo ☛ Chicago Has Some of the Worst Air Quality in the World, Blame Canada


It may not be the movie filter-like orange haze that we saw over NYC earlier this June, but it’s still pretty damn bad. The air quality right now is categorized as extremely unhealthy, and it’s the worst of any major city worldwide, according to data from IQAir. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s AirNow air quality monitor, Chicago’s air quality is “very unhealthy” this afternoon. The city’s air quality index is over 200, healthy aqi levels are under 50.


↺ The Register UK ☛ Five billion phones are dead in drawers – carriers want to mine them


The GSMA points out that having all those phones lying around is jolly wasteful, given that hauling new metals out of the ground and refining them is a messy and energy-intensive business.


A plan has therefore been hatched to do two things about it: [...]


↺ TwinCities Pioneer Press ☛ Florida issues health advisory after 4 locally contract malaria in first spread in US in 20 years


The four residents in Sarasota County received treatment and have recovered, according to the state’s Department of Health advisory. Malaria, caused by a parasite that spreads through bites from Anopheles mosquitoes, causes fever, chills, sweats, nausea and vomiting, and headaches. It is not spread person to person.


↺ New York Times ☛ Teen and Stepfather Die on Hike in Near-Record Texas Heat


The high-pressure “heat dome” that has engulfed Texas and Oklahoma for several days is forecast to shift eastward this week, bringing dangerous temperatures to the Gulf States.


↺ New York Times ☛ Heat Wave Latest News: More High Temperatures Expected in Texas and Alabama


Oppressive heat will expand out of Texas to blanket an area from Arizona to Alabama.


↺ Atlantic Council ☛ Meaningfully advancing the green agenda


To sustain the ongoing recovery against short-term headwinds and boost inclusive, productive, and sustainable development in the long term, governments cannot, and should not, act alone. Private firms can help advance the green agenda by working to create green jobs, taking measures to promote a transition to a circular-economy model, and partaking in green finance.


↺ LRT ☛ Shops in Lithuania to start charging for single-use plastic bags – how much will you have to pay?


From July 1, shops in Lithuania will no longer be allowed to issue single-use plastic bags for free. How much will they cost?


Energy/Transportation


↺ Michael West Media ☛ Aviation engineer training academy set for take off


Fledgling aviation engineers will have access to fresh training facilities as part of a boost for the sector by the flying kangaroo.


Qantas will partner with Aviation Australia to set up an engineering academy near airports in Melbourne and Brisbane.


↺ Michael West Media ☛ Consider the generations when opening and closing mines


Sustainability expert Vanessa Elliot wants the mining industry to think a little differently about mine closures.


“I want you to think about the term ecological trauma,” she told an international summit in Brisbane.


↺ New York Times ☛ Congestion Pricing Plan in New York City Clears Final Federal Hurdle


The program, which could begin next year, would charge drivers to enter Midtown Manhattan, with the revenues going to improve mass transit.


↺ CS Monitor ☛ Titan hub mission resurfaces question: Who pays for search and rescue?


After locating the lost Titan sub near the wreckage of the Titanic, the U.S. Coast Guard declined to provide a cost estimate for its efforts. The search renews questions on whether wealthy risk-takers should absorb the costs of search and rescue efforts.


↺ H2 View ☛ Consortium awarded €20m by European Commission for 10MW offshore hydrogen project


The Hydrogen Offshore Production for Europe (HOPE) consortium has signed a €20m ($21.8m) grant agreement with the European Commission to develop a 10MW offshore renewable hydrogen production project.


↺ The Atlantic ☛ The Battle for I-95


A quick repair project was the exception to the rule of American dysfunction.


↺ Latvia ☛ Electricity prices rose by 18% in May in Latvia


The average price of electricity in Latvia increased by 18% compared to April, according to AS Latvenergo’s latest survey of the electricity market, LETA reported June 26.


Wildlife/Nature


↺ The Straits Times ☛ New Zealand school kids dangle dead cats to mock protesters


Organisers told local media that the protesters had provoked the children.


Overpopulation


↺ Gizmodo ☛ We Pump So Much Groundwater, We’ve Shifted The World’s Tilt and Contributed to Sea Level Rise


Groundwater is a pretty important source of water throughout the world, especially in the U.S. It’s used to provide drinking water and it’s a backup source of water when there’s drought. But there is such a thing as taking too much out of the ground. “Earth’s pole has drifted toward 64.16°E at a speed of 4.36 cm/yr during 1993–2010 due to groundwater depletion and resulting sea level rise,” researchers wrote in the study. That’s a tilt of about 1.7 inches towards the east per year, or more than 28 inches (70 centimeters) in less than two decades.


Finance


↺ Michael West Media ☛ Hand that (Cor)mann a cigar: Labor suddenly shy about multinational tax avoidance, ‘sunshine’ reform on ice


Multinational tax avoiders and the OECD have won a reprieve from the Albanese government which has delayed legislation aimed at shining the light on tax avoidance. Jason Ward explains why the backdown is bad news.


The Labor government made an election promise, a budget promise, a legislative promise and held two consultations on landmark legislation to implement global tax transparency for multinationals. Now it has bent to corporate pressure. Landmark legislation for public country by country reporting was set to be implemented as of 1 July.


↺ Michael West Media ☛ Welcome mat put out for low-deposit home buyers


Tens of thousands of hopeful buyers can secure a property with a smaller deposit by locking down a spot on the latest home guarantee scheme.


From Saturday – the start of the next financial year – there will be 50,000 new places available for buyers hoping to jump on the property ladder with a smaller deposit, as the government guarantees a chunk of the loan.


↺ The Straits Times ☛ Hong Kong high-rise aims to become ‘village’ of the dead [Ed: Capitalism is turning corpses into business too]


A basic two-person option for space at the columbarium is sold for $78,000.


↺ Quartz ☛ The race gap in US employment has disappeared for one age group: workers 65 and over


The race gap in employment between Black and white US workers has nearly closed for people 65 and over, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).


↺ Latvia ☛ Small shops still fight Latvia’s deposit system


For small rural shops, the size of which is more than 60 square meters, the Law lays down an obligation to accept empty containers for deposit, but shopkeepers have long been saying that there are issues with that, mainly space, Latvian Radio reported on June 27.


↺ Quartz ☛ High-performing teams use this exercise to build accountability


How many times have you been in a situation where a colleague said, “I thought so-and-so was going to do that?” or “Isn’t that your job?” It’s frustrating at the minimum—but on top of that, it slows down decision-making and makes teams less effective.


↺ Quartz ☛ A tax scandal prompted PwC to sell a part of its Australian business for $0.67


PwC is selling its scandal-ridden Australian government services business for next to nothing. The consulting firm yesterday (June 25) announced the sale to Sydney-based private equity firm Allegro Funds for the price of just $1 Australian dollar ($0.67).


↺ Yahoo News ☛ Spain angers ride-hailing platforms and drivers with new regulation [Ed: Terribly loaded headline, painting those who try to guardian labourers from misuse like they're the actual problems]


The Spanish government on Tuesday angered the ride-hailing transport industry by allowing regions to restrict their activity despite a ruling by the European Union’s top court that had overturned a set of local curbs in Barcelona.


Associations representing drivers working with app platforms operating in Spain, such as Uber, Bolt and local rival Cabify, said they would challenge the decision in Brussels and ask the European Commission to open legal proceedings against Spain.


“We regret the aim is again to impose limits on business activity and not the users’ right to get a quality service,” Bolt said in a statement.


↺ The Telegraph UK ☛ UK shares on longest losing streak since pandemic


Domestic shares in the UK have slumped into their longest losing streak since the lows of the pandemic amid worries about the outlook for the economy.


Although many global stocks are trading higher in a so-called bull market, the FTSE 250 index of Britain’s midcap companies dropped for the 10th straight day on Monday.


The index, which is mainly made-up of domestically-focused companies, has fallen 5.8pc so far this year, worse than the benchmark FTSE 100, which is down 1.5pc.


AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics


↺ Scheerpost ☛ Jerusalem’s Armenian Community Fears Erasure After Controversial Land Deal


A shady property deal threatens to transform part of the Armenian Quarter in Jerusalem’s Old City into a luxury resort. “It will change the status quo and the entire picture of Jerusalem,” says Armenian activist Hagop Djernazian.


↺ Scheerpost ☛ The Boldest Step to Close the Racial Wealth Divide in Generations


One state’s “Baby Bonds” program should be a model for the whole country.


↺ New York Times ☛ Supreme Court Steps Aside in Louisiana’s Redistricting Case


The justices returned the case to a lower court on Monday, raising the chances that the state will soon be required to create a second district that empowers Black voters to select a representative.


↺ JURIST ☛ El Salvador’s president registers for possible unconstitutional second term


The ruling political party in El Salvador, Nuevas Ideas (NI), tweeted on Monday that President Nayib Bukele will seek a second term. The tweet stated, “Nuevas Ideas are invincible” as “the largest party in the history of El Salvador,” but the announcement sets up a possible constitutional conflict.


↺ CS Monitor ☛ Vacation or vote in August? Ohio scrambles for a special election.


Lawmakers in Ohio have called for an August special election that could have national implications, as voters will consider a measure to make it harder to amend the state’s constitution. Now election offices are scrambling to prepare on a tight timeframe.


↺ Marcy Wheeler ☛ “Nonzero:” On Evidence-Based Investigations and Rudy Giuliani’s Devices


Before Matthew Graves was confirmed as US Attorney, DOJ had already secured the content on Rudy Giuliani’s phone, making it available without privilege review as soon as January 6 investigators developed probable cause.


↺ Marcy Wheeler ☛ Aileen Cannon’s Not-Abnormal Orders


Aileen Cannon issued three orders. None are anything to panic about.


↺ France24 ☛ Mitsotakis sworn in as Greek PM after landslide election victory


Conservative leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis embarked Monday on his second term as Greece’s prime minister with a vow to accelerate institutional and economic reforms, after voters handed him a huge election victory for the second time in five weeks.


↺ teleSUR ☛ Sierra Leone’s General Election Results Due in a Week


This is the fifth election Sierra Leone has conducted since the civil war that ravaged the country from 1991 to 2002.


↺ New York Times ☛ How Indigenous Guardsman Rescued Children After Plane Crash in the Amazon


Colombia’s Indigenous Guard has long had to fight for a space in the national narrative. Today, it is at the center of the country’s biggest story.


↺ New Yorker ☛ Does It Matter That Neil Gorsuch Is Committed to Native American Rights?


The Justice doesn’t just join with the liberals on the bench when it comes to tribal rights; he often seems to lead them.


↺ teleSUR ☛ Guatemala To Hold Second Round of Presidential Elections


“…a second round of voting will be held on August 20…”


↺ teleSUR ☛ Electoral Process in Guatemala Full of Abstentionism and Null Votes


“…the number of null votes is 817,394, which represents 17.4042% of the valid ballots…”


↺ New York Times ☛ Arevalo Upends Guatemalan Presidential Election, Advancing to a Runoff


Bernardo Arévalo, a professorial lawmaker, stunned Guatemala’s establishment by advancing to a second round against Sandra Torres, a former first lady.


↺ Scheerpost ☛ 50 Years After the Coup, Families Demand Justice for the Disappeared In Uruguay


Throughout Latin America, families have not given up on finding the tens of thousands disappeared by military dictatorships during the Cold War.


↺ JURIST ☛ US Supreme Court requires Louisiana to redraw congressional map to include second majority-Black district


The US Supreme Court removed a stay Monday in Ardoin v. Robinson, unblocking a lower court order requiring Louisiana to redraw its congressional map to include a second majority-Black district. Louisiana had been accused of allegedly “packing” the majority of the state’s Black voters into one congressional district.


↺ JURIST ☛ Ghana dispatch: my summer clerkship in Accra is already reshaping my worldview


Thalia Clerveau is a 3L at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law. She files this dispatch from Accra. This summer I have the unique opportunity to study and work in Ghana as a law clerk at the Ghanaian Supreme Court.


↺ The Register UK ☛ First pushback against EU’s Digital Services Act and it’s not Google


The EU first unveiled its hitlist of influential platforms on 26 April. As we explained earlier that month, those companies are supposed to detail how their algorithms work, and be transparent about how their software allows ad slingers to target users or recommend content. The new rules are expected to apply from January 1, 2024.


↺ Michael Geist ☛ Buyer’s Remorse?: The Risks of Bill C-18 Leading to Blocked News Sharing Becoming Real to Canadian Media


When Le Devoir director Brian Myles appeared before the Senate committee studying Bill C-18 last month, he closed by urging the committee to pass the legislation quickly, stating “the time to act is now. We can’t wait two years between the passage of the bill and the CRTC regulations, because the delay will benefit opponents, giving them time to organize and undermine the spirit and the letter of the law.” While Myles acknowledged that claims regarding “theft” of news content by Internet platforms was overstated, he nevertheless expressed full support for the bill. One month later, the Online News Act is now law, Meta has confirmed that it will block news sharing before it takes effect, and the government is reportedly in last ditch negotiations with Google to stop it from doing the same.


↺ Gizmodo ☛ Apple Warns the UK’s Online Safety Bill Threatens Citizens’ Privacy and Security


He added, “But what our paper shows is that the software could be built or tweaked to include other hidden features such as scanning private content from the phones of hundreds of millions of people using facial recognition, the same technology used at airport gates.”


↺ BBC ☛ Apple joins opposition to encrypted message app scanning


Its intervention comes as 80 organisations and tech experts have written to Technology Minister Chloe Smith urging a rethink on the powers.


Apple told the BBC the bill should be amended to protect encryption.


Misinformation/Disinformation/Propaganda


↺ JURIST ☛ Australia communications minister announces new disinformation legislation


Australian Communications Minister Michelle Rowland announced new legislation to combat online misinformation on Sunday that would empower the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) to prevent and address the spread of misinformation on digital platforms.


Censorship/Free Speech


↺ The Local SE ☛ Swedish police give go-ahead to Quran burning outside Stockholm mosque


Swedish police have given a man permission to burn a copy of the Quran outside a mosque in Stockholm on Wednesday afternoon.


↺ Project Censored ☛ Burying Information Down Under – Censored Notebook


Timor-Leste is a tiny nation just to the north of Australia, also known as East Timor. In 2004, its newly independent government began negotiations with the Australian government over oil and gas in an offshore field between the two countries. To gain an upper hand in the negotiations, an Australian spy agency installed listening devices in Timor-Leste government offices during a humanitarian aid project.


Freedom of Information / Freedom of the Press


↺ CPJ ☛ Liberian journalist Winston Blyden attacked by politician’s bodyguards


On June 6, 2023, Hanson Kaizolu, a member of Liberia’s opposition Unity Party, ordered two of his bodyguards to “flog” and “beat up” Winston Blyden, a producer and director with the privately owned broadcaster Bana FM, after he covered daily legislative proceedings at the Capitol building in Monrovia, according to a statement by the local trade group Press Union of Liberia and Blyden, who spoke to CPJ by phone.


↺ Axios ☛ Social media news consumption slows globally


Social media has shrunk as a source for news, mostly due to Facebook’s global pullback from news.


↺ The Nation ☛ Julian Assange and Arnon Milchan: The Lopsided Scales of American Justice


The lopsided scales of the American justice system were on vivid display in England last weekend. In London’s His Majesty’s Prison Belmarsh—a fortress-like maximum security prison encircled by 18-foot water-stained concrete walls, balls of shinny razor wire and a dozen menacing guard towers—inmate A9397AY, otherwise known as Julian Assange, was into his fifth year of confinement. His accommodations consist of a plastic chair, a metal bed, and a steel toilet. That is where, for over four years, he has fought extradition to the United States on charges of espionage and computer intrusion in connection with the publication of hundreds of thousands of documents about the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.


Civil Rights/Policing


↺ Scheerpost ☛ Supreme Court Keeps Navajo Nation Waiting for Water


More than 150 years after the Navajo Nation signed treaties with the United States establishing its reservation and recognizing its sovereignty, the country’s largest tribe still struggles to secure the water guaranteed by those agreements.


↺ Site36 ☛ Cracking of Encrochat crypto phones: Shockwave from Europol


France’s secret service hacked the Encrochat crypto service and created a goldmine for law enforcement. Thousands were arrested. Doubts remain about the usability of the data in court.


↺ Jacobin Magazine ☛ To Stop the Race to the Bottom, Europe Needs to Recognize Platform Workers as Workers


On June 2, the CEOs of Deliveroo, Uber, Delivery Hero, Wolt, and Bolt joined forces in a show of unity among gig-economy bosses. Their aim: to sabotage European Union attempts at regulating platform work.


↺ Truthdig ☛ Solitary Confinement Is Torture


There is a growing body of research that shows that solitary confinement as it is used today can cause a variety of severe psychological problems, including anxiety, depression, paranoia, hallucinations and suicidal thoughts. These problems can be so severe that they can lead to long-term disability or even death.


↺ Techdirt ☛ West Virginia State Police Sued Over Hidden Cameras Placed In ‘Junior Troopers’ Locker Room


Law enforcement officers and sexual assault go hand-in-hand. Give someone enough power and they’re sure to abuse it. That’s just human nature. Only the best people should be trusted with this much power, but this nation tends to believe that only the most law enforcement will do. Consequently, our hiring practices — not to mention our disciplinary practices — are woefully deficient.


↺ Pro Publica ☛ Supreme Court Keeps Navajo Nation Waiting for Water


More than 150 years after the Navajo Nation signed treaties with the United States establishing its reservation and recognizing its sovereignty, the country’s largest tribe still struggles to secure the water guaranteed by those agreements.


Decades of negotiations with the state of Arizona have proven fruitless. The state has been uniquely aggressive in using the scarce resource as a bargaining chip to extract concessions from the Navajo Nation and other tribes, dragging out the talks while Indigenous communities await desperately needed water and infrastructure, a recent ProPublica and High Country News investigation found.


↺ New York Times ☛ While We Wait for the Supreme Court to Make Up Its Mind …


The fine print is what really matters when it comes to affirmative action.


↺ New Yorker ☛ After Affirmative Action Ends


The next big question for school admissions will likely be the legality of “race-neutral” methods that are designed with the continuing goal of producing diverse student bodies.


Internet Policy/Net Neutrality


↺ [Repeat] APNIC ☛ State of DNS rebinding in 2023


This update documents the state of DNS rebinding for April 2023. We describe Local Network Access, a new draft W3C specification currently implemented in some browsers that aim to prevent DNS rebinding and show two potential ways to bypass these restrictions.


We also discuss the effects of WebRTC IP address leak mitigation, and DNS Bit 0×20 on DNS rebinding attacks.


Monopolies


↺ European Commission ☛ Mergers: Commission sends Orange and MasMovil Statement of Objections over their proposed joint venture in Spain


European Commission Press release Brussels, 27 Jun 2023 The European Commission has informed Orange and MasMovil of its preliminary view that their proposed joint venture may reduce competition in the retail supply of mobile and fixed internet services as well as of multiple-play bundles in Spain.


↺ European Commission ☛ Antitrust: Commission seeks feedback on commitments offered by Renfe over possible anticompetitive practices in online rail ticketing in Spain


European Commission Press release Brussels, 26 Jun 2023 The European Commission invites comments on commitments offered by Renfe to address competition concerns over its alleged refusal to supply full content and real-time data to rival ticketing platforms operating in the Spanish online passenger rail ticket distribution market.


Copyrights


↺ Digital Music News ☛ Will.i.am Joins Hallwood Media for Solo Artist Management


Will.i.am joins Neil Jacobson’s Hallwood Media for solo artist management, including his track ‘The Formula’ featuring Lil Wayne as the official song of the 2023 Formula 1 season. Producer, musician, and entrepreneur will.i.am has signed with Neil Jacobson’s Hallwood Media for artist management.


↺ New Yorker ☛ Joanna Sternberg Is a Music Ninja


Growing up in Manhattan Plaza, an artists’ housing complex, the singer-songwriter sat in with the Marsalis brothers and almost had Alicia Keys as a babysitter.


Share in other sites/networks: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages. Permalink  Send this to a friend

----------

Techrights

➮ Sharing is caring. Content is available under CC-BY-SA.

-- Response ended

-- Page fetched on Sat Jun 1 07:31:01 2024