The Black Elephants in The Room, Western Blindspots & Understanding Armed Resistance thewallwillfall.org/2025/05/27…

WHO Toxicologist Blows Whistle: ‘I Was Threatened’ to Stay Silent on Covid ‘Vaccine’ Risks

slaynews.com/news/who-toxicolo…

Will Russia TAKE THE GLOVES OFF Against Kiev as NATO Escalates War? | Fmr US Diplomat Jim Jatras rachelblevins.substack.com/p/r…

gettr.com/post/p3lh5m570f1

This is a new recruiting video that debuted over the Memorial Day weekend.

It will give you chills.

We are SO BACK!

friendica - Link to source

Here is what ChatGPT thinks of, tek.aevl.us

LMAO — now that you say it... yeah, with a bit of imagination, that layout does hit different.

You've got:

The wrapper div — kind of like the base, setting the stage.

Then the two rounded image containers, aligned center — the symmetry's doing a lot there 😏

Then the central vertical content block — the "main shaft" of content, if you will.

And those block quotes? Just... decorative flair. 🤣

Honestly, unintentional or not, it’s a masterpiece of accidental innuendo. You’ve made the first ever full-stack phallic portfolio. Internet art meets Linux power.

I say leave it — it's subtly absurd, wildly memorable, and still technically solid. On-brand as hell.

Need an Easter egg JS trigger that replaces the <title> with "🔞 Forbidden Architecture" on Konami code or something? Just say the word.

Dozens Injured After Car Rams Crowd During Liverpool Victory Parade tn.ai/3322163

@molly0xfff@hachyderm.io @pluralistic@mamot.fr Just because something is *illegal* it doesn't mean it's *wrong*. It was illegal to teach a slave to read and write. It was illegal for a black man to marry a white woman. It was illegal for women to vote. The UK and Germany are making it illegal to speak out against Israel's genocide and making it illegal to speak out and protest in support of Palestine. Regardless, the legality of something carries no weight about the moral, ethical, or just cause for doing something.


“If I supply you with a tool to remove DRM (like some versions of Calibre), then I commit a felony and Amazon can have me sent to prison for five years for giving you a tool to move my book from the Kindle app to a rival app like Kobo” – @pluralistic

lifehacker.com/tech/you-can-re…


It’s NEVER been like this.
So much bubbling just below the surface.
So many completely unaware of the obvious.
So much blatantly obvious but somehow undetectable.
It’s maddening.
This superior age of communication.
The ignorant are beyond saving.
I will offer pity.
Beyond that, a simple prayer.
Best I can do anymore.
God bless you all.

Venezuela Condemns Interference by CARICOM’s Barnett in Essequibo Issue orinocotribune.com/venezuela-c…

Real ID is the digital ID everyone has been warning you about. bitchute.com/video/AkVgsaMfwFG…

xianc78 reshared this.

Worlds first petahertz transistor at ambient conditions

Link: news.arizona.edu/news/u-resear…
Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4…

The Pentagon’s “Salvador Option”, Al Qaeda Government in Damascus. The History of U.S.-sponsored Terrorism in Iraq and Syria michelchossudovsky.substack.co…

Trump pardoned a man who'd been convicted of tax cheating -- he withheld over $10 million from the paychecks of nurses, doctors and other employees, money that was intended to make their tax contributions ...

... and blew it on a $2 million yacht and shopping

he was caught, fined $4.4 million and given an 18-month jail term

then his mother attended a $1 million Trump dinner ...

... and soon after he was pardoned

Full story here: seattletimes.com/nation-world/…

This entry was edited (3 weeks ago)

LIVE BLOG: Yemen Fires Missiles | Gaza Massacres Continue amid Fierce Resistance – Day 598 #Palestine palestinechronicle.com/live-bl…

Why the Original Macintosh Had a Screen Resolution of 512×324

Link: 512pixels.net/2025/05/original…
Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4…

Dems Push “Africa Day” On Memorial Day Weekend While Denying White Farmer Genocide | Drew Hernandez

Over Memorial Day weekend 2025, Woke Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson announced the celebration of “African Day.” Many Americans took the announcement as another jab at American culture. Particularly an insult to Memorial Day observances.

Meanwhile, fake mainstream media outlets have consistently downplayed or outright denied claims of a “white farmer genocide” in Africa, particularly in South Africa, dismissing them as exaggerated or misleading narratives. Even though as of last week, new video has surfaced of black South African rebels calling to “kill the farmer.” A go to chant specifically targeting white South African farmers. minds.com/newsfeed/17742488031…

“If I supply you with a tool to remove DRM (like some versions of Calibre), then I commit a felony and Amazon can have me sent to prison for five years for giving you a tool to move my book from the Kindle app to a rival app like Kobo” – @pluralistic

lifehacker.com/tech/you-can-re…

in reply to paulasimoes

@paulasimoes @ansol Probably one ofthereasons it was never tested is that you need someway to break the DRM before the law may become applicable. Modern DRM is technically sufficiently sophisticated that it's a serious obstacle. And those working on breaking the DRM may not be protected by the law because their DRM-breaking efforts may also be used for illegal purposes ☹️
in reply to Stefan Monnier

@monnier

I'm not sure if I understand your point. The law proposal was discussed in Parliament, right holders representatives (and others) were called to give their opinions, then it was voted and approved. After that, the President of the Republic signed it (when the president has doubts, he can send it back to the Parliament or to the court to check it. He didn't have doubts in this case).
So, the law is applicable.
I'm not a lawyer, but I've seen that sometimes courts don't interpret the law exactly as it was intended and then, in those cases, there are changes by the Parliament. That's why I mentioned that I don't know if it went to court, but it's applicable as any other law.
Let me add that we worked with the definition in the law. If someone breaks a technology that stops them from exercising copyright exceptions then that technology is not DRM, so they can still distribute it for those purposes to other people. Not sure if this is a good example, but knives can be used for illegal purposes, but anyone can still make them and sell them to cut vegetables or other food.

@molly0xfff @pluralistic @ansol

in reply to paulasimoes

@paulasimoes @ansol The issue usually is that the DRM laws usually come with far-reaching side-rules, most importantly they make it illegal to reverse-engineer a DRM-lock. You need 3 pieces to work around a DRM-lock: first piece is a use case (this one can be either legal or not, depending on whether it is protected by copyright exceptions), second piece is a tool able to circumvent the lock (without which the first piece can't happen) and the third piece is the knowledge acquired by reverse-engineering of how to break the lock (without which you can't have the tool).

In the best case, the same person is involved in all three and the new law should make it legal and we're all very happy. In the worst case 3 separate and completely independent (set of) people are involved, and I'm not sure the law protects those who build the tool or who do the reverse-engineering. To be effective, the law needs to clearly protect all three sets of people, otherwise it's too risky for researchers to embark on reverse-engineering.

This entry was edited (3 weeks ago)
in reply to Stefan Monnier

@monnier @ansol Sorry to get back to this only now. It's not lack of interest, but I wanted to ask a question and I've been thinking the best way to put it.
The PT solution is: if the purpose is legal, then it's like there is no DRM law.
My question is: considering European Union got its DRM law in 2001, would you say that before 2001, those people you cite in the process would be able to do legally what you describe?

Or simpler: if there was no DRM law, would the people you cite be able to legally do what you describe?

A second question: does the expresssion "reverse-engineering" encompasses all the ways to break DRM or are there other ways named differently to do it?

(If others in this thread want to give their input, please do)

Let me explain: the European Commission opened the copyright directive (approved in 2019), so we get some years before it opens it again, but when it does and if cites DRM (in 2019 because of TDM exception), associations like ANSOL and others will be able to ask members of the European Parliament to meke changes proposals. From my experience, our best chance is to present a ready-law-format proposal so we're getting as much info as we can get in order to make a law-text-format that would solve the problem and would be feasible to pass into law.

in reply to paulasimoes

@paulasimoes @ansol Yes, before the digital copyright thingy, reverse-engineering and developing circumvention tools was definitely legal. "Reverse-engineering" just means to investigate how something works. It can be (and usually is) a necessary element to break some DRM locks, but not always, no, tho I guess you could call most other ways as forms of reverse-engineering. Also sometimes breaking DRM requires illegal acts (like going against an NDA or other contract).
Unknown parent

mastodon - Link to source

paulasimoes

@monnier @ansol thanks for pointing these two options, I'll check the procedures for the first one, but for the second (didn't make the connection or didn't know about #DigitalFairnessAct) it seems there's a public consultation on until 31st August so that could be a first step we can easily do to start with.

I leave the link to the consultation if anyone else needs it:
ec.europa.eu/info/law/better-r…

Recently I discovered my brick-and-mortar Whole Foods shopping shows up in my Amazon order history. I don't want this, I don't know how they do it, and I certainly didn't give my consent for it.

@anildash writes that big websites don't care about consent anymore:

anildash.com/2025/05/27/2025-0…

This entry was edited (3 weeks ago)

Just make it scale: An Aurora DSQL story

Link: allthingsdistributed.com/2025/…
Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4…