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We believe these findings can be addressed publicly. The security team will open issues where approaches to implement new defensive measurements will be discussed, we believe there's no single answer and as such appreciate the opinion of other Forgejo contributors on this matter.

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crimethinc.com/2026/04/30/ice-

Read the latest by @CrimethInc here on principals we should all agree on in the fight to end ICE.

Not to mention, a couple of our videos are mentioned in the further resources section:

Trouble 3 - Refugees Welcome: Creating Solidarity Across Borders

and

Trouble 22 - Crossing the Line: Border Resistance in Fortress America

> This presumption of wrongdoing... is unacceptable

Cops really don't like when they get Copped back at

(for the avoidance of doubt, everyone involved in this is terrible, but this bit is very funny to me)

theregister.com/2026/04/30/met

@marisa first of all, yes. Libraries are awesome.

Personally, I think the right hates libraries because it assists people to become educated. An educated voter base doesn't tend to vote conservative. And the moneyed class loses a bit of their edge if I get can't give their offspringing a head start with a decent education.

RE: unstable.systems/@jneen/116432

❝ hypervigilance, famously, destroys your mind and body.

when employers act like it's expected, it is a very strong message that they do not care about their workers. ❞

this AI-mania is the consequence of trust fund, nepobaby capitalists buying themselves CEO titles.

“hypervigilance” is the fear and paranoia kakistocrats live by; because they have no idea how to make what sustains their wealth.

#kakistocracy is not limited to government; it applies to VCs, startups & the corporate world

not to mention most of the devs i see in the field are generating their *tests* with AI, which completely defeats their purpose in catching AI errors.

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Why the Dems can't (and just won't) save us from Trump et al 

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@lzg @oscarjiminy The original posts I saw on the incident were loaded with anthropomorphization ("the AI 'went rogue'") which is evocative but absolute garbage framing.

HUMANS designed a system with massive single-points-of-failure, HUMANS ran untested and unreviewed automation which had unintended and catastrophic consequences, HUMANS gave admin access to a third-party automation system without having defined the most fundamental requirements and acceptance criteria for it to determine whether it was fit for purpose, HUMANS approved a change process that had no control points to manage risk and prevent cascading failure.

One of the incredibly corrosive aspects of agentic tools is the absolute disregard for QA, change control, and thoughtful process. It's all YOLO all the time. The departments allowing or mandating the use of these tools exercise even less diligence in making sure their tools are fit for purpose than they normally do which is usually next to nothing. If they were doing their jobs, IT would never deploy Excel to non-finance workers (and even then).

What we're seeing is rank incompetence from the CEO and CTO on down through IT and the software/devops organizations - people making catastrophically bad devisions and shrugging off the consequences with "oh, the _AI_ did it..." No, nobody at the top did their job to ensure the money and effort put in resulted in a robust system and effective change control processes. That wasn't the AI's responsibility, it was that of the company's executives and directors.

Here's the COVID Vaccine Paper the CDC Censored

"...The censored paper presents data on the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines during the 2025-2026 season. The results suggest that, in the first few months after vaccination (September-December 2025), this year's vaccines were 53-55% effective against hospitalizations among the study's population of adults without immune compromise."

medpagetoday.com/opinion/faust?

The paper in question:
insidemedicine.substack.com/ap

Why the Dems can't (and just won't) save us from Trump et al 

Dear #gitlab a Work Item is not something I want to be concerned with in #FreeSoftware stuff I do in my free time. Can't we have names that are more motivating like "Puzzles to solve"?

Usually, when I get interviewed for a piece on something like "AI consciousness" I am relegated to the skeptics box --- some short paragraph near the end. So it is a nice change to see this piece by Holly Baxter

the-independent.com/tech/ai-ne

🧵>>

New: President Trump's memecoin project is preparing to launch a membership club promising "elite and extraordinary experiences". This is the latest attempt to prop up a token down 97% from peak.

citationneeded.news/trump-coin

#crypto #cryptocurrency #USpol #USpolitics

MIT's Technology Review takes a comprehensive dive into the energy/climate consequences of AI, and the news is terrible for everyone but the corporate bosses and billionaires in charge of it all. Grim, grim stuff here:

technologyreview.com/2025/05/2

Starlink continues to have been designed to sell a small number of users lower-latency links at a steep premium.

And it remains way past time to stop letting corporations make a mess of the sky.

fastcompany.com/91532281/space

The corrupt Roberts Court just wiped out what was left of the Voting Rights Act. It was a purely partisan/ideological ruling, and will reverberate for decades to come as it frees the Republican Party to keep racism at the core of its beliefs, and operations.

talkingpointsmemo.com/news/how

After internal protests from Google employees after the company signed a contract with the Pentagon for military uses of AI, the company told employees it “proudly” works with the U.S. military.

Long gone are the days of bowing to employee backlash in big tech.

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