ESA teams up with Leonardo against satnav jamming


Press Release N° 36-2025

Uninterrupted access to satellite navigation is essential in our modern world, but it is threatened daily by external interference, such as jamming and spoofing. New technologies and concepts can help increase the resilience of our satellite navigation solutions. ESA and Leonardo are embarking on a joint project to explore smart antennas powered by Machine Learning to block unwanted signals

#navigaton #space #science #esa #europeanspaceagency
posted by pod_feeder_v2

First artificial solar eclipse in space


image

Video: 00:01:40

Proba-3 artificially created what is normally a rare natural phenomenon: a total solar eclipse.

In a world first, ESA’s Proba-3 satellites flew in perfect formation, blocking the Sun’s bright disc to reveal its fiery corona. This enigmatic outer layer burns millions of degrees hotter than the Sun’s surface and drives the solar storms that can disrupt life on Earth.

With its first artificial eclipse, Proba-3 has captured detailed images of this mysterious region, offering scientists new insights into our star’s behaviour.

Read the full story here.

Access the related broadcast qality footage.

#news #space #science #esa #europeanspaceagency
posted by pod_feeder_v2

#music #alternative pop rock
Matching Mole - O’Caroline - 1972 ( Robert Wyatt / David Sinclair )
youtu.be/tdVkqLrsr4M

nadloriot reshared this.

Fediverse for Freedom (FOSDEM 2025)


A short talk about why civic institutions should own and host their own presence in the Social Web. This talk was originally given at the end of the "Social Web After Hours" meetup in Brussels HSBXL, for FOSDEM 2025.
This entry was edited (2 months ago)

Open Social for the Common Good


How Government Agencies Can Embrace the Fediverse for Public Communications In recent years, there has been a significant shift in how government agencies communicate with the public. Social media has become an indispensable tool for agencies to dissemin

How Government Agencies Can Embrace the Fediverse for Public Communications

In recent years, there has been a significant shift in how government agencies communicate with the public. Social media has become an indispensable tool for agencies to disseminate emergency information, public health alerts, engage with citizens, and provide services. Among the various platforms available, the Fediverse and its most popular component, Mastodon, have emerged as potential alternatives to mainstream social media networks.

According to Pew Research Center, half of all American adults regularly get their news from social media, with Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, TikTok and X being the most used sources. The Reuters Institute finds that 30% of respondents say social media is their main source of news, while use of direct access to news sources has declined from 32% in 2018 to 22% in 2023.

Algorithmic news selection and recommendation engines further complicates the deliverability of important messaging: 48% of respondents worry about missing out on important information due to over-personalised news feeds. Not to mention, placing important safety messages in a social media news feed co-mingles it with a broad range of untrusted news and opinion, competing with disinformation and misinformation across each of the network platforms.

How is the Fediverse Different?


Traditional social media has grown into distinct services that require users to be on the very same service using the very same provider to exchange messages such that, for example, Facebook users cannot communicate with X (formerly Twitter) users directly.

An emergency alert would need to be posted to Facebook and X separately by an agency seeking to reach both audiences. This is because most traditional social media services do not use an accepted technology standard, instead creating “walled gardens” that do not allow the sharing of information outside their walls.

Contrast this with email where users can send to and receive from anyone using an email service. Gmail users can send and receive messages to Outlook users, because email is an accepted technology standard and freely interconnects.

On the left, a Social Media network diagram illustrates an individual with access to numerous information sources, each one independent and siloed. On the right, the email illustration depicts the free flow of information across all email providers.

The Fediverse offers this open model like email, but in social media networks. It is a collection of interconnected services that publish social media feeds operated by companies, nonprofits, governments, media organisations and communities, just like traditional social media. But, unlike traditional social media, it uses open technology standards. When a message is posted by one of these providers it is broadcast to the entire network of connected services, and delivered by each service to the relevant audience.

Similar to email, agency alerts are delivered by the agency itself, federating out to the broader network and directly into the inboxes of people who have requested to follow the specific feed. Thanks to the use of technology standards, this removes the walls between networks.

People familiar with the RSS publishing format may find it helpful to think of Fediverse as “Really Simple Social Syndication”. Similar to RSS an agency can publish subscribable feeds, but with the added bonus of social interaction with citizens and stakeholders.

In effect, this combines the deliverability and reach of email with the personalisation and device-alerting capabilities of social media apps.

Mastodon stands out as one of the most popular platforms in the Fediverse, functioning similarly to X but with a focus on privacy and individual controls. Other platforms include WordPress (Web sites and blogging), Pixelfed (photo sharing), and PeerTube (an alternative to Youtube).

All these platforms use the standard Web technology “ActivityPub”, a publishing standard that allows all of these services and content creators to interconnect and interoperate, delivering messages and images and videos to each other.

This then forms the “Fediverse”, a federated universe of standards-based messaging. Just as an agency Web site can be viewed on any browser from any location by any constituent, agency messages published on the Fediverse can be found and followed by any user on any connected platform.

Benefits of Using Mastodon


Mastodon and other Fediverse platforms allow agencies to operate their own servers, giving them complete control over their content and moderation policies. This autonomy can be crucial for maintaining the integrity and appropriateness of government communications.

Deliverability is not subject to third-party rate limits or external content moderation. Examples of the National Weather Service and New York City’s Transit Agency encountering problems with X highlight the precarious nature of relying on a for-profit media corporation to deliver vital public messaging.

The European Commission, the city of Amsterdam, and the nations of Germany, France, The Netherlands and Switzerland each operate their own ActivityPub service, most using Mastodon. US Members of Congress have created Fediverse accounts, as well as large numbers of academic communities and institutions. Even media companies like the BBC and Medium operate their own federated services.

Mainstream social media platforms are often criticised for algorithms that can amplify sensational and unsavory content. The Fediverse’s general lack of such algorithms reduces the risk of misinformation and platform manipulation, providing a more straightforward and reliable channel for government alerts and services. The predominant model is a chronological feed of content, searchable by keyword and hashtag.

By not relying solely on mainstream social media platforms, agencies can avoid the potential pitfalls of corporate policies and biases, ensuring a more neutral and independent stance in their communications.

Lastly, the Fediverse is known for its inclusive community standards and customisable accessibility features. This inclusivity can help agencies reach and engage with a more diverse audience.

Disadvantages


One of the significant drawbacks of using Mastodon and the Fediverse is the relatively smaller user base (15 million members) compared to established platforms. This limited reach can hinder the effectiveness of communication efforts today. However, it is important to note that 2024 will likely see the onboarding of Meta’s Threads platform (160 million users) and Tumblr (210 million users). As more and more networks begin to interoperate with the Fediverse, more and more audiences will be able to find and follow an individual agency social media feed, across all those platforms.

The decentralised and varied nature of the Fediverse can be complex for users unfamiliar with its workings. Government agencies might face challenges in training staff and educating the public about using these platforms effectively. Running a Mastodon service requires technical expertise and resources. Government agencies would need to allocate funds and personnel for server maintenance, moderation, and support, which could be more demanding than using a mainstream platform. This can be countered by creating an account on an existing Fediverse service, or following the German and French models, where a central agency operates the service and onboards individual agencies and bureaus independently.

The Fediverse’s decentralised structure can lead to fragmentation, where users are spread across different communities with varying levels of interaction between them. This fragmentation can make it challenging to disseminate information broadly and uniformly. A staggered approach might mean creating an account on an existing, well-connected service, then bringing the social graph – the followers – to an agency-created service at a later date.

Pathways to Adoption


Similar to how agencies create accounts on commercial platforms today, agencies could create an account on an existing service provider, choosing from a general service like mastodon.social, a topic-focused provider such as sciences.social, or a regional service like masto.nyc. All these servers are interconnected, agencies do not need to create accounts on multiple providers. The agency profile would then be something like “@agencyname@mastodon.social” (the Fediverse uses two @ signs).

A quick way to set up a more prominent presence in the Fediverse is to make use of a managed service from a reputable provider like Masto Host or Toot.io and choose a domain name like agencyname.social. This service would be restricted to agency staff, meaning all messages coming from that service would be agency specific. In this example, the profile could be “@alerts@agency.social”.

The last and perhaps most challenging method is to operate a service directly, similar to the governments and agencies listed above. While use of a .gov domain can be a non-trivial request to approve, publishing from an official account on a government domain adds trustworthiness and verification of the message’s source. An address along the lines of social.agency.gov would need to be requisitioned from the relevant agency OCIO or in some cases, the Chief Data Officer. In this example, the ActivityPub profile would be “@alerts@social.agency.gov”.

Each of these options offer the same overall benefit. Just as podcasts are freely available on any and all podcast feed, as we transition to interoperable networks we’ll soon be hearing the call to “follow us wherever you get your social”.

No matter which pathway is chosen, your feed is freely findable and followable from any of the interconnected platforms.

Publishing Workflow


Numerous social media management platforms like Buffer and Fedica support cross-posting to Mastodon. This could be used to mirror content already being posted to agency accounts on X or similar feeds. Chances are the social media team can easily add a Mastodon channel to their existing workflow.

Onboarding and integration advice is freely available from IFTAS, a nonprofit trust and safety organisation focused on supporting a safe and civil Fediverse. Traditional public affairs services are available from agencies like Dewey Square Group and other PR and social media consultants.

In summary, the use of the Fediverse and Mastodon by government agencies offers a new paradigm in public sector communication, marked by increased security, autonomy, and inclusivity. However, it also brings challenges in terms of reach and complexity. As the digital landscape evolves, it is crucial for government agencies to stay informed and agile, adapting their communication strategies to serve the public effectively and responsibly. The decision to use platforms like Mastodon should be a considered one, aligned with the broader goals of transparency, engagement, and public service.

If you’d like to learn more about how operating an ActivityPub service could benefit your public messaging, contact IFTAS for a free consultation.

Talking Points


Agency staff that wish to advocate for using the Open Social Web to take better control of social media messaging can use the following high level talking points to begin the conversation.

  1. ActivityPub is the accepted global Web standard for open social networking. It is published by the World Wide Web Consortium, the non-profit body that oversees Web standards.
  2. The Fediverse is the real world collection of platforms, apps, and services that implement ActivityPub. They constitute a “federated universe” of interconnected social networks and can freely communicate with one another.
  3. The Fediverse is considered to be the “next big thing” in social media. See The Verge, the EFF, Fortune, Mark Zuckerberg, and Matt Mullenweg. Usage has roughly tripled over the past year, and as larger platforms begin adopting we can expect a tenfold increase in adoption in 2024.
    So why should a public agency care?
  4. Autonomy. Government agencies should not be reliant on advertising-driven media companies to broadcast vital public messaging. You wouldn’t let any of these companies restrict access to your public Web site. Why let them restrict who can or who should see your public messages?
  5. Alignment. Support a person-centric, privacy-focused social network environment grounded in diversity and inclusivity. In many ways it is being built to counter the harms of for-profit social media.
This entry was edited (2 months ago)

Doing what muslims do.....
Violently taking over cities & countries!!!!!

gellerreport.com/2025/06/blood…

Seize The Means of Communication!


George Peretz makes a very sensible suggestion as to how the Labour Government, and others, should respond to Musk:

[T]here is an obvious thing that government could do now and that requires no legislation and costs no money: government could simply shift all the material it currently puts out on X to another platform or platforms


He goes on to mention both BlueSky and Mastodon as obvious contenders.

I certainly agree that governments — and any organisation that values its reputation, for that matter — should be moving away from X, but simply moving to another platform amounts to a sticking-plaster solution at best.

The problem with being on someone else’s platform is that you are giving that someone else control over which messages you see and which of your messages are seen. Indeed, the EU’s Digital Services Act recognises this by identifying Very Large Online Platforms, and imposing additional requirements on them around areas such as transparency and disinformation.

Federated technologies, such as Mastodon (and many others exist) resolve the problem of ownership far more effectively by allowing you install and run your own instance. Many governments — and even the European Commission — already use these solutions, thus putting themselves in control of their own communication and ensuring that individuals can access these communications without putting themselves at the mercy of commercial priorities.

Obviously, there are both costs and challenges associated with running your own instance, but none of these are insurmountable and if organisations truly want to ensure that their communications remain free (as in speech) they really should be investing in the already existing infrastructure that allows them to do so.

Any organisation should be taking steps to protect the integrity of it’s communication. This is especially true in the case of governments, political parties and campaigners, for whom free and open discussions are essential.

#Fediverse

Part of the Rebel Alliance

I made a simple site so that you can grab some stickers to celebrate your support for the open internet and Fediverse. Be a part of the Rebel Alliance! #FediverseForFreedom

andypiper.co.uk/2025/06/14/par…


I’m accidentally becoming a #FediMerch guy.

Shiny stickers


Last year, I wrote a blog post, Fediverse for Freedom – which was about the importance of a free and open Fediverse, and how and why public institutions can support it. Since then, I’ve referred to this blog post in many of my talks and in conversations, and started to use the hashtag #FediverseForFreedom.

Ahead of FOSDEM back in February, I created some stickers to share – a Fediverse logo, overlaid with the text “I Am Part Of The Rebel Alliance #FediverseForFreedom”. They were quite a hit at the time, and since then I’ve used the same image in presentations. When people have seen them, I’ve quite often been asked where they came from.

Last week, Elena Rossini – writer of the fantastic The Future is Federated blog/newsletter, talented filmmaker and photographer, and (perhaps) the Fediverse’s Number One Fan – released a great, four minute video that both explains and promotes the Fediverse and open platforms not owned by billionaires1

videos.elenarossini.com/videos…

One of the stickers shows up in several shots of the the video, and once again, I heard that people would like to be able to get some for themselves.

A simple site


I’ve been wanting to make the stickers available for a while, but the release of the video finally pushed me into getting this done!

I’d recently bought some stickers myself, from the talented Robb Knight, and he mentioned that he used Stripe Payment Links for his site. I already had a Stripe account, so thought I’d try the same thing.

So: now you can visit fediverseforfreedom.org (.com points to .org), and click on a link to to get a handful of stickers shipped in your direction! You can also easily just tell your friends, “oh yeah, I got them from Fediverse For Freedom dot org”. Nice and straightforward.
A small pile of I Am Part Of The Rebel Alliance stickers
There’s a bit more information about it all on that simple site, but I thought it might be interesting to write down a bit more about how I made it.

The site is running on Codeberg Pages. Previously I’ve put these kinds of one-off, single page sites up on GitHub Pages, or on Glitch. I’m feeling increasingly less comfortable about having all of my stuff on GitHub and hosted in the US; and, unfortunately, Glitch is going away soon (more on this in a future post). So in this case I chose Codeberg Pages, although I’m aware that they are themselves a platform that is currently in maintenance mode. I’m open to suggestions for similar sites, as I’ll need to migrate some Glitch apps somewhere very soon!

Apart from that: the whole operation is very low tech. Stripe Payment Links are convenient – Stripe itself can handle a huge variety of payment types – but, on the backend… it does not do much. No order acknowledgement emails, order management tools, or anything like that. All I get is a basic dashboard with information about the orders. I whipped up some simple Python that uses the Stripe API to grab the postal addresses of orders, and then creates SVG address labels for printing. The same code also grabs the email addresses so that I can send an email thanking the customer for the order.

In terms of shipping, that’s also a manual process – no “drop-shipping” here, I’m getting the stickers from my regular supplier (StickerApp), putting them in envelopes, and posting them out myself. That also means that delivery times will vary – although I had enough in stock to cover all of the initial orders, I’ve also been in Amsterdam for the past 3 days, so the first batch will go out on Monday.

One more thing I’m experimenting with here is GoatCounter, just to get a sense of traffic and interest. I didn’t want to put a load of invasive Google Analytics onto such a basic page, and I’ve had GoatCounter recommended to me a few times now – like Mastodon, it has also benefited from NLNet funding from the European Union in the past, and I wanted to see what was possible. It seems to do just what I wanted, whilst also being unintrusive.

What’s next?


Look… I don’t intend to become some kind of merch magnate, but I do know that some people share my own desire to display our commitment to the Fediverse and related causes, and if I can help folks to do so, then I will (did you know we already made a t-shirt? Elena has asked me for more in the same vein!).

If you want to look for other ways to show your support in public, and to give back to people or projects that work on tools that you use, take a look at the Awesome Fediverse Merch list that Jeff Sikes is curating. Plenty of options for everyone.

Finally – remember to support the creators of your favourite sites, services, and open source software directly, whenever you can!


  1. Remember, as I heard in a keynote at the PublicSpaces conference this week: “the Internet is currently controlled by four or five fucked up right wing white men” – it’s time to rewild the internet, and take ownership of our data and choices. ↩︎

Share this post from your fediverse server
https:// Share

This server does not support sharing. Please visit .

andypiper.co.uk/2025/06/14/par…

#100DaysToOffload #FediMerch #fediverse #FediverseForFreedom #merch #sticker #stripe #swag #webApp


I’m accidentally becoming a #FediMerch guy.

Shiny stickers


Last year, I wrote a blog post, Fediverse for Freedom – which was about the importance of a free and open Fediverse, and how and why public institutions can support it. Since then, I’ve referred to this blog post in many of my talks and in conversations, and started to use the hashtag #FediverseForFreedom.

Ahead of FOSDEM back in February, I created some stickers to share – a Fediverse logo, overlaid with the text “I Am Part Of The Rebel Alliance #FediverseForFreedom”. They were quite a hit at the time, and since then I’ve used the same image in presentations. When people have seen them, I’ve quite often been asked where they came from.

Last week, Elena Rossini – writer of the fantastic The Future is Federated blog/newsletter, talented filmmaker and photographer, and (perhaps) the Fediverse’s Number One Fan – released a great, four minute video that both explains and promotes the Fediverse and open platforms not owned by billionaires1

videos.elenarossini.com/videos…

One of the stickers shows up in several shots of the the video, and once again, I heard that people would like to be able to get some for themselves.

A simple site


I’ve been wanting to make the stickers available for a while, but the release of the video finally pushed me into getting this done!

I’d recently bought some stickers myself, from the talented Robb Knight, and he mentioned that he used Stripe Payment Links for his site. I already had a Stripe account, so thought I’d try the same thing.

So: now you can visit fediverseforfreedom.org (.com points to .org), and click on a link to to get a handful of stickers shipped in your direction! You can also easily just tell your friends, “oh yeah, I got them from Fediverse For Freedom dot org”. Nice and straightforward.
A small pile of I Am Part Of The Rebel Alliance stickers
There’s a bit more information about it all on that simple site, but I thought it might be interesting to write down a bit more about how I made it.

The site is running on Codeberg Pages. Previously I’ve put these kinds of one-off, single page sites up on GitHub Pages, or on Glitch. I’m feeling increasingly less comfortable about having all of my stuff on GitHub and hosted in the US; and, unfortunately, Glitch is going away soon (more on this in a future post). So in this case I chose Codeberg Pages, although I’m aware that they are themselves a platform that is currently in maintenance mode. I’m open to suggestions for similar sites, as I’ll need to migrate some Glitch apps somewhere very soon!

Apart from that: the whole operation is very low tech. Stripe Payment Links are convenient – Stripe itself can handle a huge variety of payment types – but, on the backend… it does not do much. No order acknowledgement emails, order management tools, or anything like that. All I get is a basic dashboard with information about the orders. I whipped up some simple Python that uses the Stripe API to grab the postal addresses of orders, and then creates SVG address labels for printing. The same code also grabs the email addresses so that I can send an email thanking the customer for the order.

In terms of shipping, that’s also a manual process – no “drop-shipping” here, I’m getting the stickers from my regular supplier (StickerApp), putting them in envelopes, and posting them out myself. That also means that delivery times will vary – although I had enough in stock to cover all of the initial orders, I’ve also been in Amsterdam for the past 3 days, so the first batch will go out on Monday.

One more thing I’m experimenting with here is GoatCounter, just to get a sense of traffic and interest. I didn’t want to put a load of invasive Google Analytics onto such a basic page, and I’ve had GoatCounter recommended to me a few times now – like Mastodon, it has also benefited from NLNet funding from the European Union in the past, and I wanted to see what was possible. It seems to do just what I wanted, whilst also being unintrusive.

What’s next?


Look… I don’t intend to become some kind of merch magnate, but I do know that some people share my own desire to display our commitment to the Fediverse and related causes, and if I can help folks to do so, then I will (did you know we already made a t-shirt? Elena has asked me for more in the same vein!).

If you want to look for other ways to show your support in public, and to give back to people or projects that work on tools that you use, take a look at the Awesome Fediverse Merch list that Jeff Sikes is curating. Plenty of options for everyone.

Finally – remember to support the creators of your favourite sites, services, and open source software directly, whenever you can!


  1. Remember, as I heard in a keynote at the PublicSpaces conference this week: “the Internet is currently controlled by four or five fucked up right wing white men” – it’s time to rewild the internet, and take ownership of our data and choices. ↩︎

Share this post from your fediverse server
https:// Share

This server does not support sharing. Please visit .

andypiper.co.uk/2025/06/14/par…

#100DaysToOffload #FediMerch #fediverse #FediverseForFreedom #merch #sticker #stripe #swag #webApp


Over the past week, there’s been a noticeable shift away from X in the UK, and it feels long overdue. According to Bluesky’s PR, the platform has seen a surge in new users and activity from the UK. I’ve personally noticed more people finding my profiles on both Threads and on Bluesky, and I’ve seen a significant number of “I just deleted my X account” posts on Threads. However, due to the algorithm, these posts often appear in bursts, sometimes delayed by a day or two.

My friend Neville Hobson wrote a piece today titled “Finally, the Unravelling of X,” where he discusses this migration, the reasons behind it, and the pros and cons of choosing between Bluesky and Threads. Neville touches on the idea of a “more respectful, decentralized web,” (to quote him on the Fediverse), and even highlights something I said on Threads yesterday. In response to a question about where politicians should go in a post-X world, I suggested that governments should own their own social platforms:

I wanted to expand on what I meant by a “sovereign owned/operated Mastodon instance” for the UK Parliament, and why I believe this is important.

One of the major tensions between Big Tech and national governments over the past 15 years has revolved around platform ownership and control. The European Union has even labeled several tech companies as “gatekeepers” in the Digital Markets Act. This term is telling—these companies essentially gatekeep the digital rights, data, and access of national citizens.

If governments are concerned about the dominance of privately-owned online platforms, they have a responsibility to run and own their own. At FOSDEM in Brussels this February, we noticed growing interest in Fediverse platforms and technologies like Mastodon from several national governments and the EU itself. Many of these institutions are already running their own social media instances and actively encouraging their politicians to use them. In the EU, there’s no reason to switch to Threads since Meta has restricted the platform’s availability in the bloc. Moreover, Threads doesn’t allow users to run their own instances, unlike Mastodon or even Bluesky, which, while less common, does technically support setting up a external ATProto instance (I don’t think that’s really happening though? happy to be informed and to learn otherwise – I’ll readily admit that it has not been at the centre of my attention).

For years, governments, newsrooms, and other organisations have protested the idea that private companies should control and limit their messages. A logical response would be for these entities to run their own instances of software like Mastodon—or any Fediverse-compatible, ActivityPub-based service. This would allow them to own their content, domain, and user verification, ensuring greater control and independence.

The UK is lagging behind in this area. While the EU has embraced Mastodon, and in the US, many organisations have moved to Threads, the UK has yet to take similar steps. For example, I follow @POTUS@threads.net and @whitehouse@threads.net from my Mastodon account, because they’ve enabled Fediverse sharing. Even though Threads is owned and operated by Meta, it’s positive that their content can reach into the wider Fediverse. Ideally, Threads will eventually fully integrate with the ActivityPub network, offering a two-way interaction and allowing for account, network, and maybe content portability—hence why I said, “in principle, with federated social accounts, the location does not matter so much, as long as they can be discovered and followed.” Owning the network and identity allows for broader discoverability and avoids corporate chokeholds.

As an aside: the EU has been a strong supporter of free software, Open Source, and open standards. My colleagues in the Mastodon team have signed an open letter in support of the Next Generation Internet (NGI) programs, urging the EU not to cut these investments. I fully support this stance.


There are challenges to this approach:

  • Running digital services requires consistent investment and maintenance.
  • Discovery isn’t always straightforward, and organisations seek reach and measurement—areas where Fediverse platforms currently fall short.
  • Deciding who qualifies for an account on a sovereign platform is tricky. While it makes sense for current MPs to have official accounts on a national Fediverse server, it’s harder to justify the inclusion of political parties or other entities on the same platform. This is an area where we need to improve data and account portability as the Fediverse grows.

These are important discussions that we need to be having. Politicians and the media should advocate for greater decentralisation and digital sovereignty to protect the freedom of democratic institutions.

Oh, and of course – these organisations should also fully embrace, invest in, and protect the open web.


Update 16/08/2024 – my friend Stefan Bohacek reminded me that he put together a useful resource on this same topic several months ago, Fediverse: an overview for government agencies. Well worth sending to your representatives, or sharing with your network if asked.

Update 27/08/2024 – the conversation continues in episode #425 of the For Immediate Release podcast (discussion starts around 13 min into the show). I appreciate Neville and Shel talking about my post here. Take a listen, if you want to hear how they expanded on and debated this idea – available wherever you get your podcasts.

Update 09/09/2024 – I wrote a second piece expanding on this and listing existing governments that are already in the Fediverse.

Update 13/09/2024 – I was reminded of this piece from IFTAS, Open Social for the Common Good, that is also excellent on this topic.


Finally – if you’re leaving X – congratulations – don’t look back.

Share this post from your fediverse server
https:// Share

This server does not support sharing. Please visit .

andypiper.co.uk/2024/08/15/fed…

#Blaugust2024 #100DaysToOffload #425 #activitypub #bluesky #DMA #eu #europeanUnion #federation #fediverse #freedom #government #journalism #media #meta #NGI #parliament #press #socialMedia #socialWeb #threads #unitedKingdom #web


This entry was edited (2 months ago)

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun expressed deep concern over Israel's attack on Iran's nuclear facilities and the resulting escalation of military conflict.
Guo urged all parties to de-escalate the situation and prevent further instability in the region.

globaltimes.cn/page/202506/133…

#china #iran #geopolitics

in reply to Disisdeguey🔻Pavlichenko🇵🇸

@jngorria En el año 90-91 ni foros ni blogs había. Lo mas parecido, las redes de BBS's con las áreas de Fidonet, etc.

Ahora lo que hay es una enorme cantidad de ruido mediático. Hace años hubo movilizaciones enormes contra la guerra. Ahora, pues no hay mas que ver el panorama. 😑

Radio Bagdad era una de tantas. Algunas se echan mucho de menos.

Moment of Gratitude: CloudFlare

CloudFlare saved the Internet Archive servers from DDOS attack yesterday

The max rate of this DDOS attack was 525 Gbps (44.93 Mpps) of a "TCP flood."

The Internet Archive does not have enough bandwidth to fend off that kind of attack.

Thank you #cloudflare or we would have had a very bad Saturday at the @internetarchive

DDOS attacks are coming more frequently.

This entry was edited (2 months ago)

Diese Begeisterung für das Militär ist unappetitlich.

Und Klingbeil weigert sich weiterhin die Realität zur Kenntnis zu nehmen.

»Vizekanzler Lars Klingbeil hält es für möglich, dass Deutschland Israel im Kampf gegen den Iran auch weiterhin mit Waffenlieferungen unterstützt, wie er im ZDF sagte. Er halte es aber auch für richtig zu prüfen, ob die israelischen Angriffe vom Völkerrecht gedeckt seien.«

fr.de/politik/israels-wunderwa…

in reply to stephie

Natürlich weiss Herr Klingbeil dass Israel einen völkerrechtswidrigen Angriffskrieg führt, in Gaza Ziele verfolgt die genozidal sind und am laufenden Band Kriegsverbrechen begeht. Und Klingbeil weiss auch dass Deutschland verpflichtet ist nichts zu tun was hilft die Besatzung Palästinas aufrecht zu erhalten.

Klingbeil zieht also eine Show ab wenn er sagt dass "man prüfen sollte."

Lieferung für Verstöße gegen das Völkerrecht sind verboten. Wer tut als gäbe es keine, der lügt offensichtlich

This entry was edited (2 months ago)

ESA-CNES press conference at Le Bourget Paris Air Show 2025


image

Video: 00:24:33

Watch the replay of the ESA-CNES press conference held at the Paris Air Show 2025 (Le Bourget) on 16 June 2025, with Josef Aschbacher, Director General of ESA, and Lionel Suchet, Executive Vice President of CNES.

Download the transcript.

#news #space #science #esa #europeanspaceagency
posted by pod_feeder_v2

Immutable Linux, without the hassle? Vanilla OS 2 Orchid


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Timecodes:
00:00 Intro
00:56 What is Vanilla OS?
02:47 App Compatibility
06:52 Updates and maintenance
09:20 Reproducibility and automation
11:14 How does it compare?
14:19 Sponsor: Tuxedo Computers
15:19 Support the channel

Vanilla OS is what we would call an immutable system, meaning the base system is mostly read only by default, and updated after a reboot.

You can still install packages onto that base system, from the Debian repos, as Vanilla OS is based on a snapshot of Debian Sid. You can use any system tool that lets you change configurations, and you can still edit some config files.

So, Vanilla OS was already using the principle of distro containers, letting you create an Arch, an OpenSUSE, and a Fedora container on the fly, and install packages in any of these through a single package manager, called APX. It also of course supported Flatpaks, as that's how you'll install your software on the base system.

But this time around, they added Android app support as well. The way it works, is, of course, through Waydroid, but they've integrated it pretty well. You can simply download an APK, and double click it, to bring a graphical installer that will add this app to your applications menu.

Apart from that, you still have access to all the distro containers that Vanilla OS already had: you can create one graphically, or using the APX package manager tool, and you can see the list of programs that have been installed in each container.

The new version of APX is also more flexible, it lets you add not only distributions, but also just other package managers. If you want to add support for pacman, you can just add that, and APX will create the right distro container for you.

Vanilla OS 2 also comes with a new "smart updates" system. This is a fancy name to say "we won't download and install updates while you're working".

Smart updates just mean that the partition you're not currently using isn't getting updates while you're working or using the PC, because that would divert resources from what you're doing.

System updates are basically just snapshots of Debian Sid, that have been compiled into an OCI image that is tested by the Vanilla OS devs. Once it's ready, they'll ship it to all Vanilla OS systems, and your currently unused partition is replaced by this image, and all the customizations you've applied are of course applied to this new image as well.

And of course, flatpaks and packages from distro containers are updated normally, like any other distro.

The other major change for Vanilla OS is the addition of some NixOS like features, namely the ability to create descriptive files to reproduce your system.

There's a new tool called Vanilla Image Builder, or Vib. This lets you create a Vanilla OS Image, with a bunch of customizations already added to it.
You can add specific packages, drivers, codecs, but you can also add commands that need to be run, change some configurations, and more.

The project is actually wider than just Vanilla OS images, it also lets you create container images for specific applications, by specifying a distro base. Basically lets you create Docker images.

In terms of automation, Vanilla OS comes with VSO, for Vanilla System Operator. This lets you create tasks that have conditions, and instructions. If the conditions are met, the instructions are ran. These conditions include disconnecting from the network, when you're on low battery, when a specific process starts, when a new device is connected or disconnected, when your CPU usage is high, or others, and you can also specificy a script or a command as the condition.

VSO is actually more than just a task automation system, it also lets you manage the Waydroid subsystem, export applications from a distro container to your system's applications list, so you can run it in one click, it handles sideloading of APKs and DEB packages, and more.

This entry was edited (1 week ago)

For media, unruly protesters are a bigger problem than Trump’s police state. FAIR calls on journalists to focus on the Trump administration's efforts to suppress dissent rather than the broken windows and property damage at protests.

fair.org/home/for-media-unruly…

#usa #uspol

There are brain things that I think people should know and then learn how to use to their advantage and I don't know, whatever.
But, imagine the way you think, the words you use, the tone, the imagery, the self-talk, the images in your environment that reflect you back, the images and stories you seek, the images and stories either imbued or thrust upon us...
These things create our internal filters, the way we see the world. From the inside, through repetition and patterning we create a model of the world, intentionally or otherwise. This model/filter is how we see the world as it occurs. We have no choice.
And we do not share the same filters. Look around, that's obvious.
But, with many people, it's a program.
And here's how. I learned this back with 9/11...
There's a part of your brain called the amygdala, it means almond because of the shape of it. This little gizmo smack dab in the center of your skull behind your eyes and betwixt the ears is like a switch.
If the switch is turned forward, the brain sends electrical impulses forward into the pre-frontal cortex where we think and imagine and create and solve problems and stuff and things.
But when the switch is switch back yonder, the electrical impulses go to the brain stem, colloquially known as the reptile brain. But don't assume that means that reptiles rule the world. That would be absurd, right?
But when the juice is flowing to the back forty, we don't think, we don't reason. Instead, we look to authority to tell us what to do.
Frank Herbert said it best in Dune, "Fear is the mind killer..."
Things things you should know.
Then you should learn how to use your Reticular Activating System.
Yeah, your RAS. I shit you not. Maybe next time...
Unknown parent

mastodon - Link to source

Fou

Axios reports that the US will not join the war between Iran and Israel unless Iran targets the US, contrary to the i24NEWS report that came out a short while ago. - The Cradle.

I wish, I hope that this time Israel will not manage to drag US to another unjustified war

It is unacceptable that the Collective West supports unconditionally Israel!

UN Human Rights Chief Volker Turk has delivered a sharp rebuke of Israel’s military operations in Gaza, accusing it of causing “horrifying, unconscionable suffering” for Palestinians trapped in the besieged enclave.

He condemned the Israeli government for deliberately obstructing humanitarian aid and using starvation as a weapon of war.

#GazaGenocide #Gaza #IsraelWarCrimes

🌎 🌍 🌏

Imagine choosing a fediverse provider for the first time.

You're using a guided service/server/instance/community picker.

Step 1: Do you prefer a service that:

1. primarily supports a specific language
2. is regionally relevant to you (maybe a city or a country), or
3. matches a theme or topic you care about?
4. something else (add your comment below)

Which would you click first?

(Boosts to non-English and Global South accounts are greatly appreciated.)

  • Choose by Language (9%, 13 votes)
  • Choose by Location (24%, 33 votes)
  • Choose by Topic (48%, 65 votes)
  • Something else (17%, 23 votes)
134 voters. Poll end: 2 months ago

in reply to Jaz (IFTAS)

Frankly, there should be none of this guided crap. All that does is insert bias and prejudices by the person/ org running the "guide".

Instance operators should be able to specify something like a "keywords.txt" file and "description.txt" on their server and allow users to search by keywords and then maybe the server's metrics or metadata.

This entry was edited (2 months ago)

A I had a nightmare last night

B Arch devs on drugs again


A I read in the news that the US drone used by Israel to bomb the nuclear powerplant in #Iran was running joborun linux. I jumped out of bed in total fear!

But think about it, if you really didn't want to miss your target would you run it on, something with systemd? I wouldn't, too afraid it will drop on my head instead.

The things we don't know and are afraid to find out!

#joborun

This world is turning to total shit run by absolute gangsters and thugs with limited brain capacity.

B Meanwhile in the past 2 days arch has been running some rebuilds, for no apparent logical reason, different maintainers and different sources. The only change is renaming the file name LICENSE in the source to a file called license-from-upstream same content, same checksums. I fell for the first and renamed it, but the rest have been left as LICENSE and just added 1 to the release number to match them. Absolute waste of computing capacity and electricity.

#Arch

in reply to George E. 🇺🇸♥🇺🇦🇵🇸🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍⚧️

Or try Catfish. In the Linux Mint App repository. It finds files more reliably than the Cinnamenu file search. Recoll is probably better for deep dive file searching.

itsfoss.com/catfish/
docs.xfce.org/apps/catfish/sta…

BTW. Am not trying to be creepily helpful - I'm trying to solve for myself the same problem that you mentioned.

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to TenDegreesNorth

BTW. Am not trying to be creepily helpful - I'm trying to solve for myself the same problem that you mentioned.


Didn't assume that at all and I appreciate the suggestions. Never heard of Catfish. Can't help but chuckle though since that's an odd name for a software that searches considering a catfish is someone pretending to be someone else. LOL.

in reply to Meredith Whittaker

We love Signal (as we type, we're trying to get our fellow students and colleagues to switch from Whatsapp to Signal) and we have a lot of faith in the wisdom and backbone of @Mer__edith c.s. , but if you do not want to depend on anyone's wisdom or backbone, consider also joining one of the decentralized instant messaging protocols! Like @matrix or @delta !
This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to ADudeFromNowhere

Oh my gosh. Can she get to a walk in clinic or online doc for some relief?

Bladder infections in we old timers can cause dementia-like symptoms.

Needs to be halted soonest!
God bless her.

@CONSERVATARIAN @mimimayes @johnglavine @joenarcoleptic @Greeklivesmatter1970 @Phil @Candlelight @Bakerfiend @fuzzi @Truther @HeyLiberty @Wizski @MMA @GetsGreased @DeniseE @RedRocker @Ashley

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to ADudeFromNowhere

I agree with the other ladies who have chimed in… maybe an urgent care visit is in order for antibiotics for infection. Prayers for a healthy outcome!

@CONSERVATARIAN @mimimayes @johnglavine @joenarcoleptic @Greeklivesmatter1970 @Phil @Candlelight @Bakerfiend @fuzzi @Truther @Wizski @MMA @GetsGreased @DeniseE @RedRocker @Ashley

This entry was edited (2 months ago)

If you are running a #bot account, or you toot's #privacy violating URI's and think i #repost ( #retoot ) "your" content as mine... then please remember =>

  1. it is with 99.9999% certainty not your original work, you stole it from somewhere else to make it yours
  2. You posts to much shit, I wont help boosting your #bot #account
  3. Your post contained a privacy violating URL, I put my self on the list of allowed users to #repost. I will try to remember NOT to post credit to origin posts... Please don't shoot me, You stated violating everyone #privacy, and you are of curse NOT welcome to add the link to original post as comment.
  4. If a post contains a link to a walled garden (e.g. Facebook, Cloudflare, or Quora), I will not boost it. All posts I write & all boosts from me are openly accessible to everyone.
  5. #AI Generated contents is everybody's by curt ruling, the work is NOT yours, maybe you asked the #Cluster of #Computers #thiefs to generate you something from #stolen work, that the cluster have been steeling against #License this includes and not limited to #OSS License as CC-BY-* AGPLv3 etc.

Kali Linux 2025.2 released with 13 new tools, car hacking updates


Kali Linux 2025.2, the second release of the year, is now available for download with 13 new tools and an expanded car hacking toolkit. [...]
posted by pod_feeder by tresronours

N. E. Felibata 👽 reshared this.

Proba-3’s first artificial solar eclipse


image

Solar corona viewed by Proba-3’s ASPIICS

Today, the European Space Agency’s Proba-3 mission unveils its first images of the Sun’s outer atmosphere – the solar corona. The mission’s two satellites, able to fly as a single spacecraft thanks to a suite of onboard positioning technologies, have succeeded in creating their first ‘artificial total solar eclipse’ in orbit. The resulting coronal images demonstrate the potential of formation flying technologies, while delivering invaluable scientific data that will improve our understanding of the Sun and its enigmatic atmosphere.

#news #space #science #esa #europeanspaceagency
posted by pod_feeder_v2

Algú sap desxifrar que ha pretès comunicar na Marta Roqueta amb aquesta piulada (que m'han fet arribar)?

[Que per cert, no sé si na Marta sap que Tel-Aviv havia estat Jafa abans que els sionistes expulsessin/assassinessin als seus habitants, PALESTINS. Perquè sí, Jafa era #Palestina. El factor colonialisme queda obviat en la lògica de na Marta, com també obvia la cronologia dels atacs israelians i les reaccions iranianes. Hi ha paral·lelismes agafats amb paper de fumar]

x.com/martaroqueta/status/1934…

Xi is visiting Kazakhstan for talks with Central Asian leaders, aiming to strengthen China's economic influence and safeguard its economy against potential conflict with the US. China has become Kazakhstan's top trade partner, and Xi is expected to discuss trade along with economic cooperation during his visit, including potential business deals such as an aluminum smelter project.

bloomberg.com/news/articles/20…

#china #economy

London peeps please boost (and attend if you can.)

---

🏳️‍⚧️🏴 JOIN THE FEMINIST ANTI-FASCIST COUNTER DEMO AGAINST TOMMY ROBINSON AND THE FAR RIGHT 🏴🏳️‍⚧️

On the 28th of June, racist and zionist agitators including Tommy Robinson and the 'Democratic Football Lads Alliance' (DFLA) want to march from Russell Square to Downing Street against "grooming gangs".

The far-right is attempting to weaponise survivors' pain to incite racist pogroms when sexual violence is caused by patriarchy, not immigration. Fascists don't care about the safety of women and girls, they're out for their own gain.

We won't let this happen. Join us in taking a stand.
No rape! No racism!
No silence to violence!
We keep us safe

All genders welcome
28.06.25 - 11.30am
Central London location TBA

My entire life, I've been able to remember cartoon shows down to the smallest detail... Actual life has been a different story. I've been daydreaming about an augmented reality program that turns the world into The Simpsons to help filter the extra stuff out... Kind of like how high school biology text books had drawing of human organs instead of pictures. 🤔
@actuallyautistic
Unknown parent

mastodon - Link to source

Poloniousmonk

@chris @masukomi
Respect. You're probably better at not being a dick than me. I have major beef with people showing support for trumpistas. There are a lot of them; asking me to empathize with people who literally want to make me and mine not exist. I can do the empathy thing very well but know when to cut it off, and people who support my genocide don't deserve shit. Dox them all.

⛔️🇺🇦'Russians lie about everything' — Ukraine hits out at Kremlin claims after yet another targeted drone strike on Kyiv’s civilians (more) kyivindependent.com/russians-l… #Ukraine #Mastodon #ICC #ICJ #Hague #UN #ECHR #UnitedNations #NukesForUkraine #Germany #France #Italy #OSCE #PACE #CoE #SouthKorea #Press #News #Taiwan #Media #Japan #USA #US #UK #EU #NATO #UnitedStates #UnitedKingdom
#EuropeanUnion #russiaUkraineWar
#11yrInvasionofUkraine #RussiaIsATerroristState #TrumpIsARussianAsset

#MarchaAGaza #FreedomFlotilla

Buenas noticias: Todos los voluntarios de Madleen fuera de prisión y de vuelta a casa tras su detención ilegal por Israel

rumboagaza.org/todos-los-volun…

in reply to Ay Papi 🔞 Parental Advisory

@AyPapi That's a manul (aka Pallas' Cat, Otocolobus manul), a small wildcat from Asia. There are at least two subspecies, one living in the mountains and one in the steppe. Usually you don't see them in the wild because they're very shy and also good at pretending to be small rocks, and they live in places where there aren't many humans around.

£1 billion announced for road maintenance and improvements across England and more than half is going to one project on the outskirts of London, and that won't even touch the sides of the £9+ billon scheme.www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...

Lower Thames Crossing project ...

⛔️⚠️6 people killed, 18 injured in Russian war crime attacks on Ukraine’s civilians over past day (more) kyivindependent.com/6-killed-1… #Ukraine #Mastodon #ICC #ICJ #Hague #ECHR #G7 #Canada #NukesForUkraine #Germany #France #Italy #OSCE #PACE #CoE #SouthKorea #Press #News #Taiwan #Media #Japan #USA #US #UK #EU #NATO #UnitedStates #UnitedKingdom
#EuropeanUnion #russiaUkraineWar
#11yrInvasionofUkraine #RussiaIsATerroristState #TrumpIsARussianAsset