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Cenk
Joined 2,002 karma

  1. > 11,500 terabytes of Israeli military data – equivalent to approximately 200m hours of audio – was held in Microsoft’s Azure servers in the Netherlands
  2. If you’re looking for a “iTunes before it went to shit” vibe I can also recommend Doppler: https://brushedtype.co/doppler/
  3. I believe the app “Front and Center” solves this: https://hypercritical.co/front-and-center/
  4. > those engaging a threshold of 3.5% of the population have never failed to bring about change.

    What about Hong Kong?

  5. The original claim also only referred to the usage of the term in Fort Bend County and the surrounding area
  6. Love the arrow ligatures!
  7. You know you’re paying the right amount of attention to the design of your app when you make a custom typeface
  8. I hear good things about TinkerBoy’s adapter – it even supports QMK and Via: https://www.tinkerboy.xyz/product/tinkerboy-adb-to-usb-keybo...
  9. > At least 16 of the newsletters that I reviewed have overt Nazi symbols, including the swastika and the sonnenrad, in their logos or in prominent graphics.

    > Andkon’s Reich Press, for example, calls itself “a National Socialist newsletter”; its logo shows Nazi banners on Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate, and one recent post features a racist caricature of a Chinese person. A Substack called White-Papers, bearing the tagline “Your pro-White policy destination,” is one of several that openly promote the “Great Replacement” conspiracy theory that inspired deadly mass shootings at a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, synagogue; two Christchurch, New Zealand, mosques; an El Paso, Texas, Walmart; and a Buffalo, New York, supermarket.

    > Other newsletters make prominent references to the “Jewish Question.” Several are run by nationally prominent white nationalists; at least four are run by organizers of the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia—including the rally’s most notorious organizer, Richard Spencer.

    > Some Substack newsletters by Nazis and white nationalists have thousands or tens of thousands of subscribers, making the platform a new and valuable tool for creating mailing lists for the far right. And many accept paid subscriptions through Substack, seemingly flouting terms of service that ban attempts to “publish content or fund initiatives that incite violence based on protected classes.” Several, including Spencer’s, sport official Substack “bestseller” badges, indicating that they have at a minimum hundreds of paying subscribers. A subscription to the newsletter that Spencer edits and writes for costs $9 a month or $90 a year, which suggests that he and his co-writers are grossing at least $9,000 a year and potentially many times that. Substack, which takes a 10 percent cut of subscription revenue, makes money when readers pay for Nazi newsletters.

    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/11/substack-e...

  10. Which app do you use for comics?
  11. The two part “Why’d I take speed for twenty years?” episode of Search Engine by PJ Vogt

    Part 1: https://overcast.fm/+BBVQRWO5g8

    Part 2: https://overcast.fm/+BBVQSkynRM

  12. > The Times story feature art — at the top of the article — is a mosaic composed of various images apparently supplied by Lu, including interior and exterior shots of the work camp. The mosaic is composed of 10 images. In the original article, the images’ URLs had irregular numbering, jumping from four to 20. Though only 10 of those 20 images were utilized in the opening mosaic by the Times, it was possible to view any of the 20 images by changing the image number in the file name listed in the image’s URL.
  13. They’re all from this paper, which is written by ChatGPT with some prompts from the author: https://oa.mg/work/10.1007/s12195-022-00754-8
  14. > Among the vendors behind these surveillance cameras is a company that has been accused of aiding what the US has categorized as a genocide: Hikvision. Based in Hangzhou, China, the company is one of the world’s largest makers of video surveillance equipment. Already infamous among international human rights groups, it has been blacklisted by the US and identified by the UK as a security threat for being complicit in China’s repression of the Uyghur ethnic minority.
  15. If you are interested in Library Genesis (and shadow libraries in general) I can recommend this book by Joe Karaganis: https://boook.link/Shadow-Libraries
  16. Accidental Tech Podcast: https://atp.fm
  17. >… he couldn't fathom why his fiancée, who had just landed in London, was bleeding and seemed traumatized.

    > immigration and medical officers had whisked her away for a "clearance interview". When she finally came out of the room, the 35-year-old Indian school teacher wouldn't speak.

    > … she had undergone a so-called two-finger virginity test at the UK's largest airport.

    > The schoolteacher's abuse received national attention after she shared her experience with The Guardian, describing how a medical inspector had examined her to confirm she had not borne children and was in fact entering the country as a virgin, to be married.

  18. It could be considered resistance to the ongoing occupation of Gaza and the war crimes that Israel commits there (according to Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, B’Tselem etc)?
  19. Don’t make employment offers and then rescind them? Seems pretty obvious

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