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Garbage Is Poisoning Gaza




Garbage Is Poisoning Gaza


Abdel Qader Sabbah and Sharif Abdel Kouddous
Dec 16, 2025

GAZA CITY—Amin Sabri’s battered tent was among several sitting at the foot of a hillside of rotting garbage towering some 25 feet in the middle of Gaza City. Barefoot children, their clothes caked in grime, scampered nearby. Flies were everywhere, and the stench of fetid waste blanketed the air.

"This is my tent and this is the garbage dump I’m living across from,” Sabri told Drop Site. “We don’t sleep—not at night, nor during the day—because of the garbage. The smell comes at us constantly, and our children are ill. They suffer from severe headaches. We’re dealing with an infestation of germs and insects.”



‘Invasive, deceptive, and unlawful’: Texas says your TV is tracking you illegally, and is suing to stop the dreaded Automatic Content Recognition


Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a suit on Monday against Samsung, Sony, LG, TCL, and Hisense, claiming in a press release that they "have been unlawfully collecting personal data through Automated Content Recognition ("ACR”) technology."

Paxton goes on to label ACR as "an uninvited, invisible digital invader," and in one of the five separately filed suits, he calls Samsung TVs "a mass surveillance system."

https://www.techradar.com/televisions/your-tv-is-a-mass-surveillance-system-says-texas-and-the-state-is-suing-lg-samsung-hisense-tcl-and-more-to-stop-it



Low speed when port forwarded


Yesterday I changed my ISP to one that allows port forwarding. Today the port forwarding has been enabled by the company and I set it up on the router.

After enabling it, my download and upload speed dropped from peaks of 50 MiB/s and valleys of 4-6 MiB/s to a very stable 2 MiB/s.
Nothing else has changed in my qBittorrent configuration.
If I close the ports again, the speed goes back to normal.
I checked if the ports were open on various websites and all of them show that they are forwarded.

I was looking forward to be able to port forward and connect with every possible peer for years, and today has been a big disappointment in that regard!

Has anyone else seen something like this and if so, can you point me to the right direction to fix the problem?

This entry was edited (1 week ago)
in reply to dividedby0

Are you running on port 6881? Pick a random one above 10000 and see if it changes.
in reply to frongt

No, I tried with a number of ports all on the 40k and 50k.


15 Signs Linux Is Not For You


  1. You love giving your data away
  2. You enjoy being tracked by your operating system
  3. You’re happy when your computer tells you “no”
  4. You prefer someone else deciding what you can run
  5. You feel uncomfortable if you get to have options
  6. You’d rather battle corporate tech support
  7. You’d rather rent your software than own it
  8. You think ads belong on your desktop
  9. You love being lied to about what’s “industry standard”
  10. You like rebooting for every little update
  11. You’re uncomfortable when software is transparent
  12. You think community-made tools can’t be “professional”
  13. You want intrusive AI everywhere, whether it helps or not
  14. You think the command line is only for hackers
  15. You never really wanted your computer to be yours anyway
This entry was edited (1 week ago)
in reply to petsoi

You’re happy when your computer tells you “no”


This also an affliction of the GNOMEs.



What is the deal with packagekit? ARM kernels/Hardware config passing?


in reply to √𝛂𝛋𝛆

Packagekit (at least last I heard of it) was just a higher level package manager (wrapping around dnf/apt/etc), not anything specific to kernel patching. Maybe that has changed?

You can live patch a kernel, each distro has their own way of doing things, usually, you get a kernel module that is loaded that fixes the bug live, and there is a real fixed module to go with it that gets loaded next boot. The kernel patch module is just a hack to avoid rebooting. Ubuntu has some doco on their system LivePatch which is worth a read.
I am not sure that kernel module signing is super commonly used, but there may be some distros that ship with it enabled. If it is enabled, then loading an unsigned kernel module should be impossible.

As for trust a modem, thats a tricky one. Firmware level hacks have been theorised for a long time, but there is very few examples of actual exploits. Its mostly security through obscurity.



‘My advice actually would be don’t go’: Expert warns Canadians about U.S. travel risks


in reply to trashcan

No shit. Lots of Canadians are from the groups being targeted and persecuted by the US. Why TF would we go there! Also we’re not going there, and it’s generational - fuck that shithole place.
in reply to trashcan

I feel bad for people who have to visit there for work.


Does any mobile Linux use systemd-sysupdate?


I’ve read a bit about systemd-sysupdate and it seemed like something we might want to have for our mobile devices. Then I was wondering whether any distribution already uses it on mobile devices.

I've read a bit about systemd-sysupdate and it seemed like something we might want to have for our mobile devices.

Then I was wondering whether any distribution already uses it on mobile devices.

in reply to erebion

systemd-sysupdate atomically updates the host OS, container images, portable service images or other sources, based on the transfer configuration files described in sysupdate.d(5).


Most package managers already have something like this, or can be configured to work in the same way.

This is also a relatively new systemd addition. Let it settle for a while. Conservative distros like Debian Stable don't have it yet anyhow.

This entry was edited (1 week ago)


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

I see your bankruptcy, and I blame it on years of mismanagement and stagnancy (YouTube)


Ukraine Support Tracker: Europe fails to offset US aid drop





GitHub will begin charging for self-hosted action runners on March 2026


#tech


GitHub will begin charging for self-hosted action runners on March 2026




Why The AI Bubble Was DESIGNED To Burst




Ah, yes, the effect is made of cause


Ah, yes, the effect is made of cause
Explanation: Plenty of European cultures and languages directly owe their existence (or nonexistent, see: Gaul) to the actions of the Roman Empire. The idea is that colonialism apologists like to say colonialism is too far into the past for its effects to matter to African development (and therefore it's not Europeans' fault for stealing incomprehensible amounts of wealth from the continent) while speaking in languages that wouldn't exist if not for nonsense some Italians got up to millennia ago.
in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

Is it meant to be "that would exist" or is this a pro-colonisation meme? (I know little about the Romans, if I'm just misunderstanding something)
in reply to Sasha [They/Them]

Neither, the idea is that the impact of the Romans is strongly felt even millennia after their fall, so it makes no sense to expect Africa to "get over" colonialism within the span of a few decades, yet that's exactly what colonialism apologia does.
in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

I can't really see that in the meme, but your explanation makes sense
in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

That's an ambitious topic to get across in a meme format :p



Government retreats on Victims of Communism memorial names in aftermath of Nazi controversy


The controversial Victims of Communism memorial in downtown Ottawa will no longer feature the names of specific individuals after federal officials determined a significant number could be linked to the Nazis.
Article content

The memorial, located near the corner of Wellington and Bay streets, was intended to honour those who suffered under communism.

But concerns have been raised over the years by Jewish organizations and historians that names of eastern Europeans who collaborated with the Nazis in the Holocaust have been put forward in an attempt to whitewash their past.

The Ottawa Citizen reported in 2024 that the Department of Canadian Heritage was told by historians that more than half of the 550 names to be inscribed on the Memorial to the Victims of Communism should be removed. The reason was because of potential links to the Nazis or questions about affiliations with fascist groups.



Pam Bondi wants the government to create cash bounties for turning in trans equality activists - LGBTQ Nation


[A]lso after Charlie Kirk’s death, the Heritage Foundation twisted data to claim that “50% of all major (non-gang-related) school shootings since 2015 have involved or likely involved transgender ideology.” That was in an effort to get the FBI to create a new domestic terror threat category for “Transgender Ideology-Inspired Extremism.”


How much longer until they decide to just round up the transgender people with the ~~Gestapo~~ ICE? It's getting scary for transgender people.