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- In Gaza, love stories are ending not with heartbreak, but with Israeli airstrikes.
In Gaza, love stories are ending not with heartbreak, but with Israeli airstrikes.
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In Gaza, love stories are ending not with heartbreak, but with Israeli airstrikes.
Couples who once dreamed of weddings, children, and growing old together are now among the names on death lists.
Here are three of these stories.
https://qudsnen.co/israel-is-killing-love-stories-in-gaza-these-are-some-of-them/
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undefined Majden ššØšš shared this topic
Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
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Caso Ranucci, le voci dalla piazza. Ma ĆØ ora di una manifestazione nazionale
@giornalismo
articolo21.org/2025/10/caso-raā¦
Splendida piazza, ieri pomeriggio a Santi Apostoli! Grazie a Giuseppe Conte e al M5S per averla organizzata, alle altre forze dāopposizione per aver
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Sora....
Non riesco a smettere di ridere! Sora ...
Se esiste Sora esisterĆ anche Bugliano [SI SCHERZA]
#ironia #satira https://mastodon.uno/@Dio/115418150876357644
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@bluberrycookie
Io colleziono, da oltre 20 anni, statuine di fate.
C'ĆØ stato un periodo me ne compravo una ogni volta che mi sentivo triste.
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La Bielorussia ha voglia di democrazia. Intervento dei coniugi e dissidenti Tikhanovski allāEurocamera
@news
https://www.eunews.it/2025/10/22/la-democrazia-in-bielorussia/
Uscito di prigione a giugno grazie alla mediazione statunitense, l'oppositore bielorusso Sergei Tikhanovski senza fronzoli alla Plenaria di Strasburgo. "Deve essere lāEuropa, a prendere la guida dei confini orientali. Deve essere lāEuropa il principale partner per la Bielorussia democratica"
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What Happened To Running What You Wanted On Your Own Machine?
When the microcomputer first landed in homes some forty years ago, it came with a simple freedomāyou could run whatever software you could get your hands on. Floppy disk from a friend? Pop it in. Shareware demo downloaded from a BBS? Go ahead! Dodgy code you wrote yourself at 2 AM? Absolutely. The computer you bought was yours. It would run whatever you told it to run, and ask no questions.
Today, that freedom is dying. Whatās worse, is itās happening so gradually that most people havenāt noticed weāre already halfway into the coffin.
News? Pegged.There are always security risks when running code from untrusted sources. The stakes are higher these days when our computers are the gateways to our personal and financial lives. Credit: Screenshot
The latest broadside fired in the war against platform freedom has been fired. Google recently announced new upcoming restrictions on APK installations. Starting in 2026, Google will tightening the screws on sideloading, making it increasingly difficult to install applications that havenāt been blessed by the Play Storeās approval process. Itās being sold as a security measure, but it will make it far more difficult for users to run apps outside the official ecosystem. There is a security argument to be made, of course, because suspect code can cause all kinds of havoc on a device loaded with a userās personal data. At the same time, security concerns have a funny way of aligning perfectly with ulterior corporate motives.Itās a change in tack for Google, which has always had the more permissive approach to its smartphone platform. Contrast it to Apple, which has sold the iPhone as a fully locked-down device since day one. The former company said that if you own your phone, you could do what you want with it. Now, it seems Google is changing its mind ever so slightly about that. There will still be workarounds, like signing up as an Android developer and giving all your personal ID to Google, but itās a loss to freedom whichever way you look at it.
BeginningsSony put a great deal of engineering into the PlayStation to ensure it would only read Sony-approved discs. Modchips sprung up as a way to get around that problem, albeit primarily so owners could play cheaper pirated games. Credit: Libreleah, CC BY-SA 4.0,
The walled garden concept didnāt start with smartphones. Indeed, video game consoles were a bit of a trailblazer in this space, with manufacturers taking this approach decades ago. The moment gaming became genuinely profitable, console manufacturers realized they could control their entire ecosystem. Proprietary formats, region systems, and lockout chips were all valid ways to ensure companies could levy hefty licensing fees from developers. They locked down their hardware tighter than a bank vault, and they did it for one simple reasonāmoney. As long as the manufacturer could ensure the console wouldnāt run unapproved games, developers would have to give them a kickback for every unit sold.By and large, the market accepted this. Consoles were single-purpose entertainment machines. Nobody expected to run their own software on a Nintendo, after all. The deal was simpleāyou bought a console from whichever company, and it would only play whatever they said was okay. The vast majority of consumers didnāt care about the specifics. As long as the console in question had a decent library, few would complain.
Nintendo created the 10NES copy protection system to ensure its systems would only play games approved by the company itself, in an attempt to exert quality control after the 1983 North American video game crash. Credit: Evan-Amos, public domain
There was always an undergroundāadapters to work around region locks, and bootleg games that relied on various hacksāwith varying popularity over the years. Often, it was high prices that drove this innovationāthink of the many PlayStation mod chips sold to play games off burnt CDs to avoid paying retail.At the time, this approach largely stayed within the console gaming world. It didnāt spread to actual computers because computers were tools. You didnāt buy a PC to consume content someone else curated for you. You bought it to do whatever you wantedāwrite a novel, make a spreadsheet, play games, create music, or waste time on weird hobby projects. The openness wasnāt a bug, or even something anybody really thought about. It was just how computers were. It wasnāt just a PC thing, eitherāevery computer on the market let you run what you wanted! It wasnāt just desktops and laptops, either; the nascent tablets and PDAs of the 1990s operated in just the same way.
Then came the iPhone, and with it, the App Store. Apple took the locked-down model and applied it to a computer you carry in your pocket. The promise was that youād only get apps that were approved by Apple, with the implicit guarantee of a certain level of quality and functionality.
Apple is credited with pioneering the modern smartphone, and in turn, the walled garden that is the App Store. Credit: Apple
It was a bold move, and one that raised eyebrows among developers and technology commentators. But it worked. Consumers loved having access to a library of clean and functional apps, built right into the device. Meanwhile, they didnāt really care that they couldnāt run whatever kooky app some random on the Internet had dreamed up.Apple sold the walled garden as a feature. It wasnāt ashamed or hiding the factāit was proud of it. It promised apps with no viruses and no risks; a place where everything was curated and safe. The iPhoneās locked-down nature wasnāt a restriction; it was a selling point.
But it also meant Apple controlled everything. Every app paid Appleās tax, and every update needed Appleās permission. You couldnāt run software Apple didnāt approve, full stop. You might have paid for the device in your pocket, but you had no right to run what you wanted on it. Someone in Cupertino had the final say over that, not you.
When Android arrived on the scene, it offered the complete opposite concept to Appleās control. It was open source, and based on Linux. You could load your own apps, install your own ROMs and even get root access to your device if you wanted. For a certain kind of user, that was appealing. Android would still offer an application catalogue of its own, curated by Google, but there was nothing stopping you just downloading other apps off the web, or running your own code.
Sadly, over the years, Android has been steadily walking back that openness. The justifications are always reasonable on their face. Security updates need to be mandatory because users are terrible at remembering to update. Sideloading apps need to come with warnings because users will absolutely install malware if you let them just click a button. Root access is too dangerous because it puts the security of the whole system and other apps at risk. But inch by inch, it gets harder to run what you want on the device you paid for.
Windows Watches and Waits
The walled garden has since become a contagion, with platforms outside the smartphone space considering the tantalizing possibilities of locking down. Microsoft has been testing the waters with the Microsoft Store for years now, with mixed results. Windows 10 tried to push it, and Windows 11 is trying harder. The store apps are supposedly more secure, sandboxed, easier to manage, and straightforward to install with the click of a button.
Microsoft has tried multiple times to sell versions of Windows that are locked to exclusively run apps from the Microsoft Store. Thus far, these attempts have been commercial failures. Credit: screenshot
Microsoft hasnāt pulled the trigger on fully locking down Windows. Itās flirted with the idea, but has seen little success. Windows RT and Windows 10 S were both locked to only run software signed by Microsoftāeach found few takers. Desktop Windows remains stubbornly open, capable of running whatever executable you throw at it, even if it throws up a few more dialog boxes and question marks with every installer you run these days.How long can this last? One hopes a great while yet. A great deal of users still expect a computerāa proper one, like a laptop or desktopāto run whatever mad thing they tell it to. However, there is an increasing userbase whose first experience of computing was in these locked-down tablet and smartphone environments. They arenāt so demanding about little things like proper filesystem access or the ability to run unsigned code. They might not blink if that goes away.
For now, desktop computing has the benefit of decades of tradition built in to it. Professional software, development tools, and specialized applications all depend on the ability to install whatever you need. Locking that down would break too many workflows for too many important customers. Masses of scientific users would flee to Linux the moment their obscure datalogger software couldnāt afford an official license to run on Windows;. Industrial users would baulk at having to rely on a clumsy Microsoft application store when bringing up new production lines.
Apple had the benefit that it was launching a new platform with the iPhone; one for which there were minimal expectations. In comparison, Microsoft would be climbing an almighty mountain to make the same move on the PC, where the culture is already so established. Apple could theoretically make moves in that direction with OS X and people would be perhaps less surprised, but it would still be company making a major shift when it comes to customer expectations of the product.
Hereās what bothers me most: weāre losing the idea that you can just try things with computers. That you can experiment. That you can learn by doing. That you can take a risk on some weird little program someone made in their spare time. All that goes away with the walled garden. Your neighbour canāt just whip up some fun gadget and share it with you without signing up for an SDK and paying developer fees. Your obscure game community canāt just write mods and share content because everythingās locked down. So much creativity gets squashed before it even hits the drawing board because itās just not feasible to do it.
Itās hard to know how to fight this battle. So much ground has been lost already, and big companies are reluctant to listen to the esoteric wishers of the hackers and makers that actually care about the freedom to squirt whatever through their own CPUs. Ultimately, though, you can still vote with your wallet. Donāt let Personal Computing become Consumer Computing, where youāre only allowed to run code that paid the corporate toll. Make sure the computers youāre paying for are doing what you want, not just what the executives approved of for their own gain. Itās your computer, it should run what you want it to!
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@toketin ti devo del pastin !
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Fastweb conferma il problema e fornisce una dichiarazione ufficiale
š Link all'articolo : https://www.redhotcyber.com/post/fastweb-conferma-il-problema-e-fornisce-una-dichiarazione-ufficiale/
#redhotcyber #hacking #cti #ai #online #it #cybercrime #cybersecurity #technology #news #cyberthreatintelligence #innovation #privacy
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@stefan @docpop love it. We should / could have a whole collection of CC zines for print & share at events. There was this collection of crowdsourced (?) marketing for the Fediverse several years ago, it would be cool to have something updated and broadened out. https://codeberg.org/fediverse/distributopia
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