Murdering Journalists in Gaza
counterpunch.org/2025/06/24/mu…

"On November 19, 2023, Belal Jadallah, the founding director of Press House, Palestine, was killed by an Israeli air strike as he tried to evacuate Gaza City. A decade of advocacy for independent Palestinian journalism ended in rubble. His death, featured in Robert Greenwald’s unflinching documentary Gaza: Journalists Under Fire, encapsulates the moral and material stakes More
The post

Ceasefire with Iran

IDF: We attacked missile launchers in western Iran that were ready to launch

Netanyahu: “All operation objectives achieved”

Meanwhile, this morning’s headlines:

Four killed in missile strike in Be’er Sheva

Soroka Hospital: We received 26 wounded from the strike in Be’er Sheva, two in moderate condition in the courtyard and one remains in mild condition

@palestine
@israel
#Israel #Iran
#GazaGenocide

Scientists use bacteria to convert plastic into paracetamol
english.elpais.com/science-tec…
For the first time, a scientific study has succeeded in using live microbes to produce medicine — by digesting and fermenting waste

Original research paper here nature.com/articles/s41557-025…

Al apoyar a Israel, Trump se convirtió en genocida.
Al atacar a Irán, creemos que también podría ser acusado de crímenes de guerra.
¿Qué opinas?
publico.es/internacional/trump…

Fairphone 6 is switching to a new design that's even more sustainable
L: androidcentral.com/phones/fair…
C: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4…
posted on 2025.06.23 at 11:29:51 (c=0, p=4)

‘It All Began with the Bombing of Palestinian Children,’ Says Colombian President #Palestine qudsnen.co/it-all-began-with-t…
in reply to clarity flowers

So much more becomes politically possible when you don't start from the premise that obviously you're so much better than those filthy peasants. Instead you can engage in intersectional solidarity not only across space and culture but also forward and backwards in time. As Walter Benjamin said: if the enemy wins not even the dead will be safe. We have tasted victory before and we will taste it again.

Sensitive content

# Politik kann erstaunlich effizient arbeiten, wenn es sich gegen die Interessen der individuellen Freiheit der Bürger richtet.

So planen #EUDSSR und #Bundesregierung ihren #Kampf gegen die #Meinungsfreiheit zu eskalieren


apollo-news.net/so-planen-eu-u…

#apollonews
#Steuern sind #Raub
#Sozialismus = #Kommunismus = #Faschismus
#Geld #Geldsystem #Geldsozialismus = #Neoliberalismus #EUDSSR #GreatReset #China #Rohstoffmangel #Armut
#Covid #Corona #GreatReset #FED #EZB #GeldKnechtschaft #99%
#Hayek #Mises #BitCoin #SocialJustice #FabianSocialism #MoneySocialism #Socialism #Fabiansozialismus

Italy's IRIDE programme marks major step with first satellite constellation


image

Italy's IRIDE HEO constellation launched

Seven satellites have been launched for the Italian Earth observation mission, IRIDE. The satellites form part of the Hawk for Earth Observation (HEO) constellation, which carries multispectral optical instruments.

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

Iran’s top general vows non-stop operations until Netanyahu is brought to his knees presstv.ir/Detail/2025/06/23/7…

Tehran braces for the long war after twin betrayals from Washington and Tel Aviv thecradle.co/articles-id/31515

The time has come to reveal the "first light" images taken by the NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory, located in Cerro Pachón, Chile.

The images will be presented in a press conference today at 11:00 a.m. EDT (15:00 UTC), live-stream at
youtube.com/watch?v=Zv22_Amsre…

Soon, the 8.4m telescope with its 3.2 gigapixel, 3.5° field of view, LSST Camera will start taking ultra-high-def images of the southern hemisphere sky for 10 years, covering the entire sky every few nights.
rubinobservatory.org/
1/n

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to AkaSci 🛰️

Check out this thread for some more into on the Vera C. Rubin Observatory and the world's largest 3.2 gigapixel LSST digital camera.

fosstodon.org/@AkaSci/11415021…
3/n

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to AkaSci 🛰️

The Rubin Observatory generates an astronomical amount of data every night which is stored and processed in 3 main data centers located in the U.S., the U.K. and France.

Image size: 6.4 GB compressed
Images per night: 2,000+
Data per night: 16 TB
Raw data over 10 years: 50 PB
Processed data over 10 years: 500 PB
Image transfer time (from Chile to SLAC in CA): 7 seconds
Transfer speed: ~7.3 Gbps
Alerts per night: Up to 10 million

rubinobservatory.org/news/rubi…
indico.cern.ch/event/1338689/c…
4/n

in reply to AkaSci 🛰️

Images are transferred from the Rubin Observatory using "direct writes via the S3 API to an object store" at the US Data Facility at SLAC in CA and distributed to the UK and France sites.

Given the high bandwidth-delay product of the links between sites (~8 Gbps per image transfer * ~165 ms round trip time RTT = ~165 MB), transfers are done using specialized connection pooling/keep-alive code and TCP tuning (e.g., initial and max cwnd size, congestion control, ..).

indico.cern.ch/event/1338689/c…
5/n

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to AkaSci 🛰️

Here is a low-res screen-cap from the press conference showing a large field of view of one of the first images from the Rubin Observatory. The highlighted area near the top-left represents the 2nd image in post #2 in this thread.

Full-res images are available at fl.rubinobservatory.org/galler….

6/n

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to AkaSci 🛰️

Images and videos of the "first light" data from the NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory have been posted at -
rubinobservatory.org/news/firs…
fl.rubinobservatory.org/galler…
noirlab.edu/public/news/noirla…
Check them out!
#Rubin
7/n
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to AkaSci 🛰️

Check out this video depicting 2,104 never-before-seen asteroids discovered by the Rubin Observatory in about 10 hours of observations.

Seven of them are near-Earth asteroids, which fortunately pose no danger to Earth.

"Annually, about 20,000 asteroids are discovered in total by all other ground and space-based observatories. Rubin Observatory alone will discover millions of new asteroids within the first two years of the Legacy Survey of Space and Time."

youtube.com/watch?v=DTuq-vBsDJ…
8/n

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

The key lesson from Iran? Kim Jong Un was right about everything.


#geopolitics #imperialism #war

USA and Israel, the ultimate rogue states.

It’s hard to overstate or even begin to list all the genuinely awful precedents set by Israel and the U.S.’s behavior vis à vis Iran in the latest war. But if we had to summarize it in one expression it’d be “maximum paranoia and secrecy is the only rational security strategy.”

Iran was paradoxically in many ways too transparent, reasonable and cooperative - accepting international monitoring that provided targeting intelligence, engaging in diplomatic processes that turned out to be elaborate traps and honoring agreements that were unilaterally abandoned.

In short, the key lesson for any reasonable third-party state is, paradoxically, be like North Korea.


arnaudbertrand.substack.com/p/…

The €2 Billion Microsoft Office Problem Just Got Worse: We’re Not Just Wasting Money, We’re Creating Security Disasters | by Markus Sandelin | Jun, 2025 | Medium


#GAFAM #security

Someone needs to coordinate a military operation. Instead of using purpose-built operational planning systems, they create an Excel spreadsheet with unit locations, timing, and personnel assignments. They email this spreadsheet to 15 different national representatives for “coordination.” Each person makes changes, saves a new version, and emails it back.

Within 48 hours, there are 23 different versions of this file floating around on various government email servers, shared drives, and personal devices. Nobody knows which version is current. Half the recipients forward it to subordinates who “need to see this.” Some clever staff officer converts it to PowerPoint for a briefing.

Final result: Operational security details scattered across hundreds of endpoints with zero audit trail, no access controls beyond “has this person’s email address,” and absolutely no way to revoke access once the information is distributed.

This isn’t hypothetical. This is how NATO’s enterprise side operates when people need to actually get work done.


medium.com/@mrsandelin/the-2-b…

pascal macaigne reshared this.

I disagree with ‘tests of purity’ taken to the extreme. Of course a university will collaborate with a range of industries, usually with the aim of improving the way things are done. Universities support change in the world, sometimes incrementally, sometimes dramatically.

mastodon.social/@Snoro/1147359…

in reply to Luis Apiolaza

When I pay you to legitimise me and to train my future workforce, we’re not collaborating, I’m employing you.

My dad’s a professor and I’ve been in academic environments my whole life and it’s pretty clear, at least from my experience, who’s holding the leash and who’s wearing the collar in the relationship between industry and academia.

(Which is sad because I still naively wish an academia removed from industry servitude existed as I’d love to be a part of it.)

* this is not to say folks don’t exist within this system that work against the grain of industry influence – often at odds with the goals of the institutions that work for. As a friend who heads up a department in Vienna once told me, “I’m the only one I know who said no to Google’s €100,000” (to whitewash their image on privacy)

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

Aral Balkan reshared this.

in reply to Aral Balkan

@ojala@mastodon.nz “I sat in hearing range through this crazy New Zealand Business Community conference, and it was literally NZ’s board of corporations discussing how to dismantle and juice NZ’s remaining academia (in ways that were then directly done, as they laid out they were going to, over the ensuing two years).”

– An anonymous source, in a private response to my post; shared with permission

Aral Balkan reshared this.

in reply to Theurgia_Goetia

The image depicts a coastal scene shrouded in a thick layer of smoke, likely from a wildfire. In the foreground, a calm body of water, possibly a lake or sea, is visible, with a sandy beach and some beach chairs and umbrellas lined up along the shore. The beach is bordered by trees and a few buildings, suggesting a developed area. The middle ground features a line of trees and buildings, partially obscured by the smoke. In the background, a mountain range is visible, with smoke billowing from the top, indicating the source of the fire. The sky is overcast, with a gradient of colors from light to dark, suggesting either dawn or dusk. The overall atmosphere is hazy and muted, with the smoke dominating the scene and reducing visibility.

Provided by @altbot, generated privately and locally using Ovis2-8B

🌱 Energy used: 0.182 Wh

Είδατε όμως τι ωραία, νοικοκυρεμενα γίνονται όλα;
Εκεί που είχαν αρχίσει επιτέλους να ξυπνάνε οι πολλοί για τη γενοκτονία των Παλαιστινίων, έγινε ένα πανηγύρι με το Ιράν και τώρα που (λένε πως) ησυχάζουν, όλα καλά παιδιά
ΌΛΑ ΚΑΛΆ 🤡

counterpunch.org/2025/06/24/gl…

Learning to serve humanity: Lessons from Beijing Polytechnic University tehrantimes.com/news/514859/Le…

Να σταματήσει ο πόλεμος γιατί είναι επικίνδυνο για τον κόσμο.

Άντε το πολύ πολύ να κουνήσουμε καμία Παλαιστινιακή σημαία σε καμία συναυλία, να φορέσουμε και μια χρωματιστή keffiyeh που είναι και τις μόδας, και την βγάλαμε την υποχρέωση.

Ρε εμείς να μην κινδυνεύουμε και ασ'τους άλλους να τους σφάζουν.

Τι να κανς να κατς α μαλώνς?

Could Windows and installed apps upload all my personal files?


Could Windows and installed apps upload all my personal files?

Dear all

I have deleted Onedrive and disabled File system access in Privacy.

  1. I would like to know, which other ways that my personal files could be uploaded in a non-malicious non-hacker way?
  2. Just by using Windows, Microsoft could upload all my personal files to themselves if they would?
  3. Does every installed App / software have full access to my whole drive? How can I found out, how much access it has?

Thank you for your interest and reply

Best regards


@Rikudou_Sage@lemmy.world

Yes, every application has access to everything. The only exception are those weird apps that use the universal framework or whatever that thing is called, those need to ask for permissions. But most of the apps on your PC have full access to everything.

And Windows does collect and upload a lot of personal information and they could easily upload everything on your system. The same of course applies for the apps as well, they have access to everything except privileged folders (those usually don’t contain your personal data, but system files).

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

Autonomous User doesn't like this.

evil iran is supporting TERRORISTS !!!!
good usa is supporting freedom fighters.

where is the difference except perspective?

youtu.be/entizy2lCH4?t=5484