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Minutes from 6 November 2025 WG Meeting

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Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
  • @_elena These are worrying times…

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  • @devnull l'articolo però riguarda soprattutto i servizi privati, quelli in cui non è necessario individuare l'identità, ma solo l'autenticazione di accesso. È qui che si nota l'importanza della mancanza di tracciamento dell'identità degli utenti

    @privacypride

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  • @informapirata @privacypride non è che mi torni tanto. Il fatto che tengano alla tua privacy non significa che non sappiano niente di te, ma che non lo divulgano e fanno il possibile affinché i dati non finiscano in mani che non hanno ottenuto il tuo consenso a trattarli. Le aziende sanitarie sanno perfettamente chi sei, dove abiti e tutti i dati sanitari: secondo la logica che proponi allora violano la privacy ed è puro marketing?

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  • @evan The last time I bought MS Office was 2010, and for last 8 years I’ve had no issue opening MS Files in LibreOffice, which also does heroic work opening my really old image files like Mac PICT.

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  • Thanks, everyone! I have intentionally used the first three, and Pages launches every time I download a word processing file, so I think I used it this month, too.

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  • Hackaday Links: December 21, 2025

    It’s amazing how fragile our digital lives can be, and how quickly they can fall to pieces. Case in point: the digital dilemma that Paris Buttfield-Addison found himself in last week, which denied him access to 20 years of photographs, messages, documents, and general access to the Apple ecosystem. According to Paris, the whole thing started when he tried to redeem a $500 Apple gift card in exchange for 6 TB of iCloud storage. The gift card purchase didn’t go through, and shortly thereafter, the account was locked, effectively bricking his $30,000 collection of iGadgets and rendering his massive trove of iCloud data inaccessible. Decades of loyalty to the Apple ecosystem, gone in a heartbeat.

    As for why the account was locked, it appears that the gift card Paris used had been redeemed previously — some kind of gift card fraud, perhaps. But Paris only learned that after the issue was resolved. Before that, he relates five days of digital limbo and customer support hell, which included unhelpful advice such as creating a new account and starting over from scratch, which probably would have led to exactly the same place, thanks to hardware linking of all his devices to the nuked account. The story ends well, perhaps partly due to the victim’s high profile in the Apple community, but it’s a stark lesson in owning your digital data. If they’re not your computer, they’re not your files, and if someone like Paris can get caught up in a digital disaster like this, it can happen to anyone.

    Hackaday isn’t the place readers normally turn to for fiction, but we wanted to call attention to a piece of short fiction with a Hackaday angle. Back in June, Canadian writer Kassandra Haakman contacted us about a short story she wrote focused on the 1989 geomagnetic storm that temporarily wiped out the electric grid in Québec. She wanted permission to quote our first-hand description of that night’s aurorae, which we wrote a bit about on these pages. We happily granted permission for the quote, on condition that she share a link to the article once it’s published. The story is out now; it’s a series of vignettes from that night, mostly looking at the disorientation of waking up to no electricity but a sky alive with light and energy. Check it out — we really enjoyed it.

    Speaking of solar outbursts, did 6,000 Airbus airliners really get grounded because of solar storms? We remember feeling a bit skeptical when this story first hit the media, but without diving into it at the time, cosmic rays interfering with avionics seemed as good an explanation as anything. But now an article in Astronomy.com goes into much more detail about this Emergency Airworthiness Directive and exactly what happened to force aviation authorities to ground an entire fleet of planes. The article speaks for itself, but to summarize, it appears that the EAD was precipitated by an “uncommanded and limited pitch down” event on a JetBlue flight on October 10 that injured several passengers. The post-incident analysis revealed that the computer controlling the jet’s elevators and ailerons may have suffered a cosmic-ray-induced “bit flip,” temporarily scrambling the system and resulting in uncommanded movement of the control surfaces. The article goes into quite some detail about the event and the implications of increased solar activity for critical infrastructure.

    And finally, if you’ve been paying attention to automotive news lately, it’s been kind of hard to miss the brewing public relations nightmare Toyota is facing over the rash of engine failures affecting late-model Tundra pickups. The 3.4-liter V6 twin-turbo engine that Toyota chose to replace the venerable but thirsty 5.7-liter V8 that used to power the truck is prone to sudden death, even with very few miles on the odometer. Toyota has been very cagey about what exactly is going wrong with these engines, but Eric over at “I Do Cars” on YouTube managed to get his hands on an engine that gave up the ghost after a mere 38,000 miles, and the resulting teardown is very interesting. Getting to the bottom of the problem required a complete teardown of the engine, top to bottom, so all the engineering behind this power plant is on display. Everything looked good until the very end; we won’t ruin the surprise, but suffice it to say, it’s pretty gnarly. Enjoy!

    youtube.com/embed/vL4tIHf_9i8?…

    hackaday.com/2025/12/21/hackad…

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  • You're not a Vim user, @monnier ? 😉

    Do you really manage to avoid using a word processor at all?

    @evan

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  • @disorderlyf @mullvadnet it was the danish government pushing this last time, not the EC motu proprio

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    @mariusor hey I haven’t published it yet, I’ll be doing so in the next couple of weeks
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    Destroying Autocracy – November 27, 2025Welcome to this week’s “Destroying Autocracy”.It’s your source for curated news affecting democracy in the cyber arena with a focus on protecting it. That necessitates an opinionated Butlerian jihad against big tech as well as evangelizing for open-source and the Fediverse. Since big media’s journalism wing is flailing and failing in its core duty to democracy, this is also a collection of alternative reporting on the eternal battle between autocracy and democracy. We also cover the cybersecurity world. You can’t be free without safety and privacy.FYI, my opinions will be in bold. And will often involve cursing. Because humans. Especially tech bros. And fascists. Fuck ’em.The Programmer’s Fulcrum is the future (and smaller) home for a fusion of Symfony Station and Battalion. Its tagline is Devs Defending Democracy, Developing the OMN.You can sign up now and for 2025 get an email with links to each week’s Symfony Station Communiqué and Battalion “Destroying Autocracy” post along with their featured articles. And you’ll be set with TPF after the fusing in January.We are posting on the Fediverse now at @thefulcrum @thefulcrum.dev and original website content will start in 2026.Featured Item(s)The Atlantic writes:Over the weekend, Elon Musk’s X rolled out a feature that had the immediate result of sowing maximum chaos. The update, called “About This Account,” allows people to click on the profile of an X user and see such information as: which country the account was created in, where its user is currently based, and how many times the username has been changed.Nikita Bier, X’s head of product, said the feature was “an important first step to securing the integrity of the global town square.” Roughly four hours later, with the update in the wild, Bier sent another post: “I need a drink.”Almost immediately, “About This Account” stated that many prominent and prolific pro-MAGA accounts, which signaled that they were run by “patriotic” Americans, were based in countries such as Nigeria, Russia, India, and Thailand.@MAGANationX, an account with almost 400,000 followers and whose bio says it is a “Patriot Voice for We The People,” is based in “Eastern Europe (Non-EU),” according to the feature, and has changed its username five times since the account was made, last year.On X and Bluesky, users dredged up countless examples of fake or misleading rage-baiting accounts posting aggressive culture-war takes to large audiences. An account called “Maga Nadine” claims to be living in and posting from the United States but is, according to X, based in Morocco. An “America First” account with 67,000 followers is apparently based in Bangladesh. Poetically, the X handle @American is based in Pakistan, according to the feature.Elon Musk’s Worthless, Poisoned Hall of MirrorsJust FYI, December 25th will be the day I stop exploring the stupidity of our current timeline and the last Destroying Autocracy post. Again, see the notes above about The Fulcrum.We start and end with good news to make the middle bearable.The response to Russia’s War Crimes, Techno Feudalism, and other douchebaggeryEuroNews reports:Life after chatbots: Meet the ‘AI vegans’ refusing to accept a virtual realityKagi is:Introducing SlopStop: Community-driven AI slop detection in Kagi SearchOrion 1.0 ✴︎ Browse BeyondFucking awesome if you use Macs.TechPolicy Press reports:Why Civil Society Is Sounding the Alarm on the EU’s Omnibus RollbackThe Guardian reports:European parliament calls for social media ban on under-16sThe Free Software Foundation Europe shares:Germany Stack: Only Free Software Enables Digital SovereigntyWikimedia announces:Unifying our mobile and desktop domainsDecidim reviews:Decidim Fest 2025: Collective energy, digital sovereignty and a common roadmapThe Conversation reports:Tim Berners-Lee wants everyone to own their own data – his plan needs state and consumer support to workMullvad reports:An important victory – but we still need to stop Chat Control.Ploum says:Don’t Do Snake Oil WritingFiona Fokus says:I don’t care how well your “AI” worksAbso-fucking-lutely.NeutralThe Guardian asks:Has Britain become an economic colony?England always makes sure to ape the shitty parts of America.W3C shares:Preventing Abuse of Digital CredentialsBen Werdmuller covers:The EFF we need nowThe Evil Empire (AKA Autocracy) Strikes BackHeise reports:Analysis of the Digital Sovereignty Summit: Open Source Gets ScoldedWe Are Solomon reports:Hungry for data: Inside Europol’s secretive AI programThe Intercept reports:The FBI wants to use Surveillance Drones with Facial Recognition TechnologyHow Corporate Partnerships Powered University Surveillance of Palestine ProtestsThe Counter Offensive reports:Witkoff was secretly giving Russians advicePariah StatesThe Register reports:CISA warns spyware crews are breaking into Signal and WhatsApp accountsDarkReading reports:DPRK’s FlexibleFerret Tightens macOS GripBig MediaThe Columbia Journalism Review reports:Could Public Skepticism of the Press Actually Be Good for Democracy?It could since most Big Media is owned by right-wing c^nts.ProPublica shares:ProPublica’s May-August 2025 Impact Report: Independent Investigations That Spur ChangeBig TechSage JournalsAlgorithms at your service: Understanding how X’s systems of recommendation likely fueled the far-right riots in the United Kingdom by amplifying visual representations of racist conspiracy theoriesRenée DiResta reports:On the internet, nobody knows you’re a MAGA influencer… in LagosThe Daily Beast reports:Top MAGA Influencers Accidentally Unmasked as Foreign Trolls404 Media reports:America’s Polarization Has Become the World’s Side HustleThe Register reports:Meta knows how bad its sites are for kids, say lawyersMM+M reports:What healthcare marketers need to know about Meta’s censoring of abortion adsThe Markup reports:How American Big Tech guards the profits it extracts around the worldCybersecurity/PrivacyBleepingComputer reports:Cox Enterprises discloses Oracle E-Business Suite data breachHmm, cable companies are literally shit at everything.Code beautifiers expose credentials from banks, govt, tech orgsDarkReading reports:Infamous Shai-hulud Worm Resurfaces From the DepthsThe Register reports:FCC guts post-Salt Typhoon telco rules despite ongoing espionage riskFediverseTerence Eden has:Now witness the power of this fully operational Fediverse!Ghost has:Explore the independent webRadWeb Hosting shares:How to Host Your Own Mastodon Server on a VPS (5 Minute Quick-Start Guide)How to Install Pleroma on Ubuntu VPS (5 Minute Quick-Start Guide)NodeBB announces:NodeBB v4.7.0 — category boost fixes, remote media/emoji in chats, and more!Slightly Decentralized Social MediaConnected Places has:ATmosphere Report – 144CTAs (aka show us some free love)That’s it for this week. Please share this edition of Destroying Autocracy.Follow me on the Fediverse. Or this site via the button in the footer. Or via RSS. Or even our future home in 2026, if you want a head start.Keep fighting!Ringleader, BattalionReuben Walker Follow me on the Fediverse#activitypub #ai #atproto #autocracy #bigJournalism #bigTech #democracy #fascism #fediverse #mastodon #nodebb #pleroma #stopChina #stopIsrael #stopRedAmerica #stopRussia #supportUkraine #technoanarchism #technofeudalismhttps://battalion.mobileatom.net/?p=3992
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    I'm writing an #article about the different implementations of #activitypub @fediverse Which implementations would you like to see tested?Does anyone know of a #pleroma server that isn't fascist? Pleroma has a lot of interesting stuff, but unfortunately, it also has a lot of rotten people.#pleaseboost
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    What do you do when you've found a PeerTube video and you want to like or reply to a comment without having to create a PeerTube account on every instance? Activity Pub makes this easy from a number of popular federated services. Written Version: https://fedihost.co/blog/slug/how-do-i-comment-on-peertube Get A PeerTube Instance: https://fedihost.co/hosting/peertube