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My mentions are full of bad takes on Mozilla, privacy preserving measurement, and the economics of free software...which I will briefly address, now:

All non-consensual collection of telemetry is unethical.

No you can't just slap a "privacy preserving" label on a mechanism and have it be true.

Even if you could that doesn't bypass the consent obligation.

Yes, Funding free software is complex. developing free software is expensive. I'm a free software dev. I know this. First hand.

I'm sure it is just a coincidence that the disability and long-term sickness rates in three nations starting rising at the start of the #COVID19 pandemic and are still rising almost five years later, despite the fact the global health emergency ended.

Data shown is for Spain, the US, and the UK.

"The entire climate of the entire planet is gonna get WILD but I'm sure I'm fine here in this one spot on the Earth." Just... no.

Which is WHY each of us needs to demand our local state/county/city representatives make a Climate Action Plan, stop pumping carbon in the air & prepare for our local risks.

Even then... the climate will continually surprise us. This is an ongoing project for the next 100 years.

Or we can ignore it but the status quo is the riskiest option of all.

#ClimateChange

@foone "Never underestimate the bandwidth of a bunch of terabyte-sized microSD tapped to a postcard."

i keep thinking about this thing i read in a book chapter about buying cookware:

'i prefer not to buy nonstick because i want to buy things that get better with age, not worse'

and thinking about how that applies to software

#Canada is *finally* moving forward on fast trains in the heavily-populated #Montreal - #Toronto corridor.

Three high-speed rail powerhouses are in the bidding.

#France (SNCF) — land of TGVs
#Spain (Renfe) — AVEs
#Germany (DB) — ICE trains.

Decision coming, stay tuned...

When asked if creators should be compensated for their work being used to train AI, Mark Zuckerberg said, “I think individual creators or publishers tend to overestimate the value of their specific content in the grand scheme of this.”

That's pretty rich coming from someone who never had an original thought in his life. Someone whose empire is based on stealing and buying ideas.

@straphanger That's a lovely design. A vehicle that beautify a city, how ... unusual.

I promote pedal-powered parklets for people, not parking for petrol-powered Pontiacs and Porsches.

@Hex @Dragon What's not to love when box tickers and bean counters are in charge of strategy? I guess they KPIs look awesome.

GREAT change is approaching. NIST will standardise prohibition of requirement of composing passwords from various character styles, and requirement for periodic password changes. These are harmful and obsolete rules. Now they will be treated as a cybersecurity weakness pages.nist.gov/800-63-4/sp800-

Imports of Russian LNG via the Rotterdam LNG terminal recently doubled. Share of Russia in overal EU gas imports rising again too, to 17% in the first half of the year, helping to fund Russia's war against Ukraine.
telegraaf.nl/nieuws/2059999398

Sad to see that it's New Zealand's turn to suffer the potentially deadly costs of a right wing government's contempt for scientific expertise.

Skimping on geohazards monitoring and risk assessment in a country bisected by a plate boundary? What could go wrong?

#geology #NZ #earthquakes #volcanoes

nzherald.co.nz/nz/gns-cuts-cou

LinkedIn is now using everyone's content to train their AI tool -- they just auto opted everyone in (except folks in the EU, it seems)
I recommend opting out now (AND that orgs put an end to auto opt-in, it's not cool)
Opt out steps: Settings and Privacy > Data Privacy > Data for Generative AI Improvement (OFF)

We shouldn't have to take a bunch of steps to undo a choice that a company made for us.
Orgs think they can get away with auto opt in because "everyone does it".
If we come together and demand that orgs allow us to CHOOSE to opt in, things will hopefully change one day.

LinkedIn seems to have auto enrolled folks in the US, but hearing from folks in the EU that they are not seeing this listed in their settings (likely due to privacy regulations).
If you're outside of the US, I'm curious if you're seeing this?

It's Ig Nobel season again! This one's remarkably depressing! 😀

"Longevity data are used for projections of future lifespans, and those are used to set everyone’s pension rate. You’re talking about trillions of dollars of pension money. If the data is junk then so are those projections. It also means we’re allocating the wrong amounts of money to plan hospitals to take care of old people in the future. Your insurance premiums are based on this stuff."

theconversation.com/the-data-o

It has been a tremendous privilege to be part of a 68-strong international cross-disciplinary team of scientists trying to solve the puzzle of a #seismic signal that was observed around the globe for nine days. A massive #rockslide into a #Greenland #fjord generated a #tsunami with 200 meter run-up that coalesced into a long duration seiche. Our findings are published in the journal Science this evening.

science.org/content/article/me

After decades of stagnation, Japan is engaged in a multibillion-dollar industrial policy to jump-start the lackluster economy and recapture its position as a tech innovator. japantimes.co.jp/business/2024 #business #tech #rapidus #semiconductors #chipmakers #hokkaido #globaleconomy

Fun* fact in this video: the 'disposable' vapes thrown away in Britain alone contain enough lithium batteries to make 1.2 Million e-bikes.
I've been independently powering things with vape batteries that I've rescued before seeing this video. Pull out the cell, add a cheap usb charging module and you have a fully rechargeable 3.7v power source. If you need higher voltage you can put them in series and you can even get multi-cell balancing modules for next to nothing if you want to have a few in parallel for more current.
I don't trust them for anything critical, but they're great for low-budget projects as the cells are completely free. My bike lights are all powered by them (one can run a flashing bike light for a couple of weeks' use), as well as various other things that had their batteries die, or that didn't come with rechargeable batteries.
I also only charge them somewhere flameproof, though I haven't had any issues so far.
#making #electronics #reuse
youtube.com/watch?v=ehp23hrrEH

Architects and civil engineers are licensed because their mistakes can bring down bridges and buildings. Electricians are licensed because their mistakes can burn down houses. Their work is inspected by third parties because the stakes are so high.

None of this stops small scale folks from doing their own DIY electrical or construction, given that it passes inspection when it's important enough.

At this point, software developers can have this level of financial and now physical impact. Smart cars are killing people. IoT devices are getting hacked and they could destroy massive amounts of infrastructure, burn down houses, bring down airplanes, etc. So when do we start requiring SDEs to be licensed and bonded?

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