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#La trasparenza e la effettiva decentralizzaizone di Bluesky alla prova dei fatti di un fatto

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Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
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  • This morning my eldest child challenged me to say “I love you” to him a thousand times. I readily agreed. Then my youngest jumped on the bandwagon and requested the same. I agreed once more.

    I’ve succeeded on both counts.

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  • Hackaday Links: December 7, 2025

    We stumbled upon a story this week that really raised our eyebrows and made us wonder if we were missing something. The gist of the story is that U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright, who has degrees in both electrical and mechanical engineering, has floated the idea of using the nation’s fleet of emergency backup generators to reduce the need to build the dozens of new power plants needed to fuel the AI data center building binge. The full story looks to be a Bloomberg exclusive and thus behind a paywall — hey, you don’t get to be a centibillionaire by giving stuff away, you know — so we might be missing some vital details, but this sounds pretty stupid to us.

    First of all, saying that 35 gigawatts of generation capacity sits behind the big diesel and natural gas-powered generators tucked behind every Home Depot and Walmart in the land might be technically true, but it seems to ignore the fact that backup generators aren’t engineered to run continuously. In our experience, even the best backup generators are only good for a week or two of continuous operation before something — usually the brushes — gives up the ghost. That’s perfectly acceptable for something that is designed to be operated only a few times a year, and maybe for three or four days tops before grid power is restored. Asking these units to run continuously to provide the base load needed to run a data center is a recipe for rapid failure. And even if these generators could be operated continuously, there’s still the issue of commandeering private property for common use, as well as the fact that you’d be depriving vital facilities like hospitals and fire stations of their backup power. But at least we’d have chatbots.

    Well, that won’t buff right out. Roscosmos, the Russian space agency, suffered a serious setback last week when it damaged the launchpad at Site 31/6 during a Soyuz launch. This is bad news because that facility is currently the only one in the world capable of launching Soyuz and Progress, both crucial launch vehicles for the continued operation of the International Space Station. As usual, the best coverage of the accident comes from Scott Manley, who has all the gory details. His sources inform him that the “service cabin,” a 20-ton platform that slides into position under the rocket once it has been erected, is currently situated inside the flame trench rather than being safely tucked into a niche in the wall. He conjectures that the service cabin somehow got sucked into the flame trench during launch, presumably by the negative pressure zone created by the passage of all that high-velocity rocket exhaust. Whatever the cause of the accident, it causes some problems for the Russians and the broader international space community. An uncrewed Progress launch to resupply the ISS was scheduled for December 20, and a crewed Soyuz mission is scheduled for July 2026. But without that service cabin, neither mission seems likely. Hopefully, the Russians will be able to get things tidied up quickly, but it might not matter anyway since there’s currently a bit of a traffic jam at the ISS.

    We saw a really nice write-up over at Make: Magazine by Dom Dominici about his impressions from his first Supercon visit. Spoiler alert: he really liked it! He describes it as “an intimate, hands-on gathering that feels more like a hacker summer camp than a tech expo,” and that’s about the best summary of the experience that we’ve seen yet. His reaction to trying to find what he assumed would be a large convention center, but only finding a little hole-in-the-wall behind a pizza place off the main drag in Pasadena, is priceless; yes, that mystery elevator actually goes somewhere. For those of you who still haven’t made the pilgrimage to Pasadena, the article is a great look at what you’re missing.

    And finally, we know we were a little rough on the Russians a couple of weeks back for their drunk-walking robot demo hell, but it really served to demonstrate just how hard it is to mimic human walking with a mechanical system. After all, it takes the better part of two years for a new human to even get the basics, and a hell of a lot longer than that to get past the random face-plant stage. But still, some humanoid robots are better than others, to the point that there’s now a Guinness Book of World Records category for longest walk by a humanoid robot. The current record was set last August, with a robot from Shanghai-based Agibot Innovations going on a 106-km walkabout without falling or (apparently) recharging. The journey took place in temperatures approaching 40°C and took 24 hours to complete, which means the robot kept up a pretty brisk walking pace over the course, which we suppose didn’t have any of the usual obstacles.

    hackaday.com/2025/12/07/hackad…

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  • Il mercato dello spyware: come Intellexa sopravvive alle sanzioni e continua a colpire


    @informatica
    Apple e Google inviano ondate di notifiche di minaccia a centinaia di utenti in oltre 150 paesi, e il panorama della sorveglianza digitale mostra una verità scomoda: l’architettura dello spyware commerciale non si disintegra sotto i colpi

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  • @jalefkowit there's a handful of musicians that are just kind of perfect. They've continued to be really cool, interesting, and relevant through decades, and someone I always want to hear talk about music. Marr is one of them. Stewart Copeland, Nile Rodgers, and Pino Palladino spring to mind as other examples.

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  • @lalchimistadigitale

    Quella è l'intenzione!

    Grazie😀

    @versocasa

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  • @francina1909 E pensa che a questo elemento gli abbiamo dato le nostre comunicazioni militari via satellite. Dei geni, proprio!
    Sarebbe ora che la UE tutta si svegliasse e cominciasse ad investire pesantemente per la creazione di hardware e software europeo, ma figurarsi...

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    Destroying Autocracy – November 13, 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 and featured articles for 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.We are posting on the Fediverse now at @thefulcrum @thefulcrum.dev and original website content will start in 2026.Featured Item(s)Wrekage/Salvage writes:Once you’ve seized the tools of political life to build communal power, it’s hard to forget what a hammer feels like in your hand.Bonfire Networks is a tiny software org that has spent the past couple of years building a framework for communities on the open social web. At the end of last week, they released Bonfire Social, a microblogging app.Like Mastodon, Bonfire Social runs on ActivityPub, but it takes differently opinionated approach to sociability.(It has) features I (and many others) have been advocating for in Fediverse software for years, often while people explained at length that such things simply could not be implemented.Most exhilarating to me, though, is that they aren’t just building another microblogging app. They’re making a toolkit for internet community software that is healthy and good and designed around real human needs from the start.As they put it in their crowdfunding campaign, they’re making building blocks for communities on the open social web.Sparks fly upTotal awesomeness that needs to blow up. We will cover (and support) Bonfire extensively on The Programmer’s Fulcrum.We start and end with good news to make the middle bearable.The response to Russia’s War Crimes, Techno Feudalism, and other douchebaggeryThe Kyiv Independent reports:Ukraine slaps new sanctions on Putin’s team and propagandist publishersRadio Free Europe reports:EU ‘Democracy Shield’ Aims To Counter Russian DisinformationOpen Web Advocacy has:Tim Berners-Lee On Apple’s Browser Engine Ban and Web AppsHeise reports:Office alternative from Germany by Ionos and Nextcloud is now availableGreat.Speaking of Germany, The Guardian reports:ChatGPT violated copyright law by ‘learning’ from song lyrics, German court rulesMeta could face millions in fines for not signing content deals in AustraliaDigital Rights Bytes asks:Can the government read my text messages?404 Media reports:Judge Rules Flock Surveillance Images Are Public Records That Can Be Requested By AnyoneTechCrunch reports:Wikipedia urges AI companies to use its paid API, and stop scrapingBrookings says:We should all be LudditesPreach brother.Poynter reports:As independent newspapers disappear, a secretive alliance fights to save themNeutralOpen Knowledge shares:Open letter: Harnessing open source AI to advance digital sovereigntyThe Ringer has:How Catastrophic Is It If the AI Bubble Bursts? An FAQ.The Evil Empire (AKA Autocracy) Strikes Back404 Media reports:DHS Gives Local Cops a Facial Recognition App To Find ImmigrantsTechCrunch reports:Why a lot of people are getting hacked with government spywareLawmakers warn Democratic governors that states are sharing drivers’ data with ICEEuractiv reports:EU’s red tape bonfire puts AI ahead of privacy protectionNOYB reports:EU Commission internal draft would wreck core principles of the GDPRThe Guardian reports:The EU has let US tech giants run riot. Diluting our data law will only entrench their power.Tech giants vow to defend users in US as spyware companies make inroads with Trump administrationFreedom of the Press Foundation reports:Kansas county pays $3M for forgetting the First AmendmentPariah StatesBleepingComputer reports:APT37 hackers abuse Google Find Hub in Android data-wiping attacksBitDefender reports:Russian hacker admits helping Yanluowang ransomware infect companiesThe Register reports:UK asks cyberspies to probe whether Chinese buses can be switched off remotelyKrebs on Security reports:Google Sues to Disrupt Chinese SMS Phishing TriadBig MediaThe Columbia Journalism Review has:Editorial Independence Means Technological IndependenceThe Open Media Network peeps.The Guardian reports:EU investigates Google over ‘demotion’ of commercial content from news mediaBig TechAnd:Big Tech’s control freak era is breaking itself apartThe Techno Anarchist Manifesto lists tools to help you avoid most of this AI horseshit.Lies, damned lies and AI: the newest way to influence elections may be here to stayJesus.Digital colonialism: the new frontier of Latin American dependency.A side effect of techno feudalism.PC Mag reports:Asking ChatGPT About Affairs or Abortion? Be Careful, Marketers Are Peeking at Your PromptsCybersecurity/PrivacyThe Register reports:OWASP Top 10: Broken access control still tops app security listIEEE Spectrum reports:Your AI Agent Is Now a Target for Email Phishing. New tools can help thwart the attacks.Like bitcoin, if you use this shit you deserve what you get.DarkReading reports:Orgs Move to SSO, Passkeys to Solve Bad Password HabitsGlassWorm Returns, Slices Back into VS Code ExtensionsCheck out VS Codium friends.BleepingComputer reports:Police disrupts Rhadamanthys, VenomRAT, and Elysium malware operationsFediverseElena Rossini shares:The rebellion will be federated – 2025 editionA New Social has:Bonfire and A New SocialBonfire explains:Matters of care – why Bonfire maintenance comes first.Comciencia has:A comunicação da ciência no FediversoLaura Hargreves shares:Growing My Own Little Fediverse: The Joy of Going Further Down the Rabbit HoleInside My Matrix: How I Reclaimed Messaging from the CloudTechCrunch reports:Threads targets podcasters with new features, aiming to become the home for show discussionsBTW, fuck Threads.Slightly Decentralized Social MediaThe Dabbler has:Chicken Caesars: they’re messing with your Bluesky feedTechCrunch reports:Jack Dorsey funds diVine, a Vine reboot that includes Vine’s video archiveHmm, this is built with Nostr.CTAs (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 #autocracy #bigJournalism #bigTech #bluesky #bonfire #bridgyfed #democracy #fascism #fediverse #matrix #stopChina #stopIsrael #stopRedAmerica #stopRussia #supportUkraine #technoanarchism #technofeudalism #threads #xmpphttps://battalion.mobileatom.net/?p=3838
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    Es wäre etwas anderes, wenn ich keine Beweise hätte. Wenn ich nur eine zufällige Person wäre, die wilde Behauptungen ohne jegliche Dokumentation aufstellt, wäre das natürlich Unsinn.Aber ich habe Beweise. Ich habe das aus erster Hand gesehen und sogar das Risiko auf mich genommen, Dinge von der Arbeit zu teilen, um es zu untermauern.Dieser Ort soll doch besser sein als Blue Sky, Twitter, Facebook und Reddit – richtig?Wenn dem so ist, warum werden dann Betrüger geschützt und behandelt, als gehörten sie zu einer besonders geschützten Personengruppe?#Betrug #Täuschung #Fediverse #ActivityPub #Twitter #Reddit #Facebook #BlueSky
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    Last week we've crossed 2k users posting on self-hosted #bluesky #atproto PDSes for the first time (2.2k) 📈(About half of that is Blacksky, I think)
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    This is what solidarity looks likehttps://thenexusofprivacy.net/what-solidarity-looks-like/(Part 2 of “Decentralization” and erasure: Blacksky, Bluesky, and the ATmosphere)@general @fediverse @fediversenews #blacksky #bluesky #activitypub