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I sometimes have the feeling that there is certain kinds of essential that either requires developers to already be assholes to be able to build it effectively, or working on it turns the developers into assholes. This is stuff that we all need, that society is built upon. I appreciate the work, but personally want nothing to do with those communities. Yet it is also important that essential software is free software and open to contributions. It is a paradox I often think about.

For about two decades, it's been clear that can easily and cheaply cover cities with good internet access. The hard part has been finding ways to make it sustainable. now says that they have 20 times as many WiFI routers as is needed to cover the whole city. They're trying a model to get more sharing happening. How about also considering just building out and networks? There are many proven examples of both all over theregister.com/2023/04/27/ntt

RT @Iwillleavenow
Biden issued an order that doesn't even fully ban commercial spyware, just spyware that has a few high-risk issues (controlled by a foreign gov, previously used by foreign nation to access U.S. gov devices, etc.) and the industry is in a full panic.
thehill.com/policy/cybersecuri

"Microsoft Edge sends a request to bingapis .com with the full URL of nearly every page you navigate to"

Microsoft secretly tracks people across myriads of websites/apps via pixel. Now it was caught tracking them directly in the browser, by default. Wild.
theverge.com/2023/4/25/2369753

I always wondered why the anti- protests seemed ineffective at ending it, even though so many parts of society where involved: business, clergy, politicians, hippies, etc. Based on declassified docs, Nixon and Kissinger had a fully developed military plan to massively increase attacks on Vietnam, including using nukes. They just had to give the generals the go ahead. The protests actually convinced them they couldn't get away with it, so that plan was canceled. pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperienc

Even , one of the world's major weapons suppliers, is limited in what it can do because it is running out of ammo. They are trying to buy more from whoever will sell it. was going to sell ammo to Russia, but when the deal became public, they canceled it because of sanctions. When looking at less powerful nations at war like , and more, the impact of limiting weapons sales can be even greater. The hard part is reigning in domestic corporations that make big profits 2/2

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When talking about why wars continue, the focus is so often about the reasons why people are fighting. That is valid, but there are many factors. One key one that is rarely reported on is the supply of weapons. If those who fight have only rifles, the scale of the damage will be drastically less than if they have artillery. The stories of and running out of ammo show a way to affect wars: do not supply them. This is and 's law and it can be effective 1/2

Vice has a good article on that demo: vice.com/en/article/qjvb4x/pal When viewing something like this, is important to consider what the considers legal. Apparently, mass bombing, death, and destruction by the military is fully legal there since there has been no prosecutions for running the etc.

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demos in , it is sadly ironic how often they say "safe and ethical": youtube.com/watch?v=XEM5qz__HO

Looks like the SAGE mentality is alive and well in the US military industrial context, and the is still driving it. For example, that demo shows they still pretend to be able to get perfect info to feed their centralized, automated overview. This chapter from the book Closed World gives good insight into the mentality of this kind of project: web.archive.org/web/2001111602

Looks like @arstechnica is now verified on here! Always great to see this feature used. It'll be even more prominent in the future.

joinmastodon.org/verification

Did you know you can see how #Python parses your code? 🐍🤯

Breaking a .py file into a tree of "tokens" 🪙

python3 -m tokenize hi‍.py

Turning that into an "abstract syntax tree" 🎋

python3 -m ast hi‍.py

Then "disassembling" that to bytecode 🤖

python3 -m dis hi‍.py

When people say "comprehensions generate fewer operations than loops", they used dis.

I used the ast module when I made my undataclass script: pythonmorsels.com/undataclass/

More in this PyCascades talk: m.youtube.com/watch?v=RcGshw0t

"It is very simple," said Birol. "If we want to reach our 1.5 C target, you cannot use as much oil, gas and coal as you are using today." dw.com/en/iea-fatih-birol-new-

#Yubico is merging with some other company to go public on a stock exchange
yubico.com/blog/yubico-is-merg

Get ready for Yubico "maximizing shareholder value" — also known as "enshittification." :blobcat_owo:

"How can you know what you want or feel or think—who you are—if you don’t know which way history’s marionette strings are tugging?" - one of the nice ways of framing history in the book thenation.com/article/culture/

"training GPT‑3 in Microsoft’s state-of-the-art U.S. data centers can directly consume 700,000 liters of clean freshwater (enough to produce 370 BMW cars or 320 Tesla electric vehicles), and the water consumption would have been tripled if training were done in Microsoft’s data centers in Asia" themarkup.org/hello-world/2023

For a positive example, starting in 1919 in , the Social Democratic Party built affordable housing by taxing luxury goods. Capitalist construction companies gained from this because they got lots of new contracts. This work has spread to the point where a majority of the city lives in subsidized housing. 3/3

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