Apartheid régime reopens Gaza’s Rafah crossing with Egypt for limited passage of residents
Gaza's Rafah crossing with Egypt reopened on Monday for the movement of residents in both directions, Egyptian and Israeli security officials said.According to officials, entry and exit for civilians began Monday after the initial pilot operation was coordinated with Egypt and a European Union delegation overseeing the Gaza side of the crossing.
The reopening will be limited, with Israel requiring security checks for Palestinians entering and exiting. Both Israel and Egypt are expected to cap the number of travelers, with an Egyptian official noting that 50 Palestinians would cross in each direction on the first day. Palestinians holding prior Israeli security approval and those who left Gaza during the war will be permitted to pass, with organized bus transport to the crossing.
A diplomatic source said on Sunday that the entry of people through the crossing depends on receiving a list of residents who have received Israeli permission to enter.
Palestinian sources in the Gaza Strip told Haaretz that despite the announcement of the opening of the crossing, residents have not been given concrete information about its use. It is not clear who will be able to leave the Strip and when, the sources added.
Due to Egypt's demand, exiting the crossing will initially only be allowed for the sick and wounded with their accompanying persons. On Friday, a source in the security establishment told Haaretz that approximately 150 people will be able to enter and exit through the crossing each day.
"Will civilians who are not defined as humanitarian cases also be allowed to leave?" wondered a source connected to the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza — the technocratic committee founded by U.S. President Donald Trump's Board of Peace initiative, which will oversee daily life in Gaza.
"And what will happen to those returning from Egypt? Everything is still a mystery. It is not yet known whether the exit will be conditional on payments, as was the case during the war and even before it."
Departures will initially be limited to patients and the wounded, along with their escorts.
Another Palestinian source told Haaretz that Egypt insists that the crossing movement be two-way. According to him, Egypt demands that a balanced ratio be maintained between those leaving the Gaza Strip and those entering it — to avoid a situation in which hundreds of Palestinians leave Gaza for Egypt, but few move in the opposite direction.
According to estimates, there are currently about 80,000 Palestinians in Egypt, residents of Gaza with only Palestinian passports, and the authorities in Cairo believe that they should return to the Gaza Strip. "They have difficulty integrating into Egypt, the costs are high, and they also need to make a living. They have no option of immigrating to a third country — not in the Arab world, not in Europe, not in the United States. They would prefer to return to the Gaza Strip if serious reconstruction begins," the source said.
Palestinian Authority personnel will operate the Gaza side of the crossing under the supervision of the European Union Border Assistance Mission. Israel will establish a military checkpoint beyond the Gaza side, in line with Egypt's opposition to placing it at the border itself.
Two sources familiar with the details told Haaretz that Israel had asked the United States to deploy private U.S. security contractors at the crossing. One of the sources confirmed that Israel did not trust the EUBAM or the Palestinian force. According to the source, when the Rafah border facilitates the delivery of aid and equipment, Israel wants to "ensure it can trust" the authorities inspecting the border.
The reopening followed the return of the last Israeli hostage, Ran Gvili, whose body was found in Gaza and returned to Israel last week. Gvili was the last Israeli hostage held in the territory. The military said he was found in a mass grave in the Shujaiyeh area, based on intelligence received last week.
Israeli forces seized the crossing in May 2024, about nine months into the Gaza war. During the early months of the conflict, thousands of Palestinians fled through Rafah to Egypt, with estimates suggesting about 100,000 left Gaza since the war began. Following Israel's military operations, the crossing and the adjacent Philadelphi corridor were closed, cutting off a critical route for Palestinians needing medical treatment abroad. Over the past year, only a few thousand patients were allowed to leave via Israel, while thousands more remain in urgent need, according to the United Nations.
Despite the reopening, Israel continues to bar foreign journalists from entering Gaza, a restriction in place since the start of the war. The Foreign Press Association has petitioned Israel's Supreme Court to allow journalists access, arguing that the public is being denied vital information. Israeli authorities maintain that journalists' entry could endanger both soldiers and reporters, even though aid and UN workers have been granted passage.
The reopening is a key part of the first phase of U.S. President Donald Trump's broader Gaza plan, which envisions governance by Palestinian technocrats, disarmament by Hamas, and Israeli withdrawal while the territory is rebuilt.
However, Israel remains skeptical about Hamas's willingness to disarm, and some officials warn that military operations could resume. Since the October cease-fire, Israeli strikes in Gaza have killed more than 500 Palestinians, while militants have killed four Israeli soldiers.
blog.zaramis.se/2026/02/02/pol…
The unfair society we live in
[a water pipe is delivering water directly in the mouth of a huge character sitting on a chair, gorging on the water, below a label]\
Evil proletarian getting all the unemployment benefits\
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[a few little droplets are falling from the water pipe into the mouth of a thin character in a suit, next to the label]\
Poor billionaire trying to buy their 7th yacht
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Templates | The Bad Website
Templates - See more by visiting this page on thebad.websiteThe Bad Website
Stiles joins London union leaders in calling for workers’ action centre to remain open in wake of auto layoffs
Stiles joins London union leaders in calling for workers’ action centre to remain open in wake of auto layoffs
There are fears that laid off workers from London’s auto sector will soon have nowhere to turn to help with re-training. This comes as a workers’ action centre gets set to wind down in just a few days.Bryan Bicknell (CTVNews)
blog.zaramis.se/2026/02/02/van…
My thousand dollar iPhone can't do math
My thousand dollar iPhone can't do math
TL;DR: My iPhone 16 Pro Max produces garbage output when running MLX LLMs. An iPhone 15 Pro runs the same code perfectly. A MacBook Pro also runs the same code perfectly.Rafael Costa (Rafael's Journal)
Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.
According to Statcounter, Windows 11 held a 55.18% market share in October 2025. That share dropped to 53.7% in November and dropped again in December. Now, Windows 11 holds a 50.73% market share.
gs.statcounter.com/os-version-…
Desktop Windows Version Market Share Worldwide | Statcounter Global Stats
This graph shows the market share of desktop windows versions worldwide based on over 5 billion monthly page views.StatCounter Global Stats
French tech company Capgemini to sell its subsidiary working for US ICE amid international controversy over the deaths of two people in ICE operations
French company Capgemini to sell US subsidiary amid controversy over ICE links
French IT giant Capgemini said Sunday it was selling its subsidiary working for the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency amid international controversy over the deaths of two people in ICE operations.RFI
'Call of Duty' Microtransactions Surge Followed Jeffrey Epstein Advice to CEO
42 years ago, this was state of the art copy protection
1984, Jet Set Willy was released. A great game that every kid at school wanted. Of course we all wanted a copy, but it cost £8 here in the UK, which was several weeks' pocket money.
Copying games then involved finding a kid whose Dad was seriously into Hifi and had a stackable stereo system, then we'd copy it with their tape to tape system. But JSW had this as the cassette inlay.
How this works? When the game loaded after about 10-15 minutes, it would ask what colours were in Grid square A5, or H9 etc. Get it wrong twice and the game would exit and you'd need to start over.
(If you're wondering what happens if you're colour blind - you could write to the publishers and if they accepted your complaint, they would ask you to send them the game and would give you a cheque to cover the refund)
Of course, kids are determined and inventive, and this was well before photocopiers or digital cameras, so we would spend our lunchtimes with pencil and paper writing down every single combination...
It was a good game, with some great music, but really really hard.
(Credit to intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue45/… for the picture, and the page also goes into more depth)
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The Secret of Monkey Island - Dial A Pirate
The Secret of Monkey Island - Online Interactive Code Wheel. Dial-A-Pirate Code Wheel is form of copy protection from original The Secret of Monkey Island Retail boxed game developed by LucasFilm Games in 1990...www.oldgames.sk
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade for Amiga I think it was which came with a photocopy proof translation table that you used with a red piece of translucent plastic overlay, which would reveal the codes underneath.
Or maybe that was Zak McKracken.
Both amazing games. I remember the Monkey Island 2 one also, but I think we had cracked versions for all of those games anyway tbh. :)
ye Monkey Island was easy to photocopy :D
I remember in my local PC shop, they had a whole binder of copy-protection mechanisms they would photocopy from when they sold you a pirated game :D
It's understandable that companies wanted to protect their software, but this method was a bit feeble. On the ZX Spectrum at least, it could be overcome by a single POKE!
Still, at least it wasn't the horrible, user-hostile LensLok system...
The inks used couldn't be faithfully scanned/replicated. So even color copiers were useless.
My father had a friend from his childhood who ended up owning a graphic design studio, and sometimes he would have to have these replicated using classic photography.
When I think back, we jumped through a lot of hoops to get a free game when we could have just spent a couple dollars lol
It wasn't. A lot of the copy protection was the game asking for the word on a particular page and line in the manual. When you pirated the game (which was easy, since it was literally just copying the disk to another disk), you photocopied the manual as well. Or rather photocopied the photocopy of the manual, I didn't see a lot of original games for the PC and Commodore 64 back in the 80s, but I sure had hundreds if not thousands of games.
I guess the colour thing was probably a method of circumventing the photocopier, because colour photocopiers were not really generally available back then.
Defeating a 40-year-old copy protection dongle – Dmitry Brant
cross-posted from: feditown.com/post/2498813
Defeating a 40-year-old copy protection dongle – Dmitry Brant
Defeating a 40-year-old copy protection dongle – Dmitry Brant
cross-posted from: feditown.com/post/2498813
Defeating a 40-year-old copy protection dongle – Dmitry Brant
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France Just Created Its Own Open Source Alternative to Microsoft Teams and Zoom
France Just Created Its Own Open Source Alternative to Microsoft Teams and Zoom
Not only for them, but any other non-European videoconferencing software.Sourav Rudra (It's FOSS)
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Have you tried selfhosting it? For me, it was unusable, despite a beefy cloud server, even for just 2 people. And thats ignoring setup complexity.
This one is optimized and kubernetes ready, which makes it super easy. Will try out soon.
It's licensed under Apache license:
Apache License 2.0
A permissive license whose main conditions require preservation of copyright and license notices. Contributors provide an express grant of patent rights. Licensed works, modifications, and larger works may be distributed under different terms and without source code.Permissions
Commercial use
Modification
Distribution
Patent use
Private use
Limitations
Trademark use
Liability
Warranty
Conditions
License and copyright notice
State changes
You know that they could just fork it, right? Saying that "it's american", just causes FUD for opensource.
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Nothing to do with license.
Firefox is a massive piece of code and following modern browser standards is so difficult that it's a feat for big teams of developers and no small team seems to be able to pick the pace needed.
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This is awesome!
But I am confused, isn't github Microsoft though? Why host it there?
Why didn't they pour money on Jitsi?
European, mature, FOSS...
I fear grift is there somewhere.
Also, French engineering has a habit of turning sound concepts into messy overengineerd but underbuilt results.
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Also, French engineering has a habit of turning sound concepts into messy overengineerd but underbuilt results
Any exemple ?
The development is quite transparent. The team is looking at reduced development and more integration, so instead of "pouring money on a project", they tried various solutions, and picked the "best one".
One criteria was an integration with their internal communication system: Tchap, essentially a Matrix server. The Matrix video call group didn't cut it because it requires ElementX, and apparently there are unresolved issue there (no idea if it's the app itself or due to customization of their Matrix server). They ended up with Visio, that is not a "new" solution: it's based on LiveKit.
github.com/tchapgouv/tchap-pro…
Etude des différentes options visio dans Tchap
Dans le cadre des priorités de la suite numérique : gros besoin d'intégrer la visio à Tchap en prio 2024 Plusieurs options semblent s'ouvrir à nous et nous avons besoin d'une investigation ops pour...julie-ri (GitHub)
W is a SWEDISH startup funded by private entities.
It has absolutely nothing to do with France, and the only link you could make here is it's owned at 25% by a media that received subsidies from the EU, like a lot of media do, and France is part of the EU.
The startup has not been endorsed by any public entity at any level.
This is completely irrelevant.
So they do use available solutions.
Well, I wish you could just say that, but "the French" is not a consistent body of people.
While we have this team working on a sovereign suite, Macron is rushing a law to ban <15 years old on social network, so… they will soon require all users to provide an ID. It will have to go through a "trusted third-party", not directly to Meta/Twitter/etc., and not to the gov directly, but we all know how much corporates and governments have been trustworthy historically. And once the data is collected, you're just one law away from all abuse.
Needless to say that the teen will rush to VPN, so they also mentioned a potential ban on VPNs! (France would then join the short-list of great democratic VPN-banning countries: North Korea, China, Iran…)
France has horrible laws for encryption, so how much do you want to bet this thing doesn't have e2ee.
This is an Intel operation
France requires companies to get permission to export cryptography. They're one of the worst countries in Europe for crypto.
comparitech.com/blog/vpn-priva…
Encryption laws: Which governments place the heaviest restrictions on encryption?
Deciphering control: Explore the global landscape of encryption laws to find out which governments impose the strictest regulations on data privacy and security.Paul Bischoff (Comparitech)
Zoom, Teams, Meet, and all the major providers do not have e2ee on by default. It's a paid extra and almost nobody turns it on.
Mega uses e2ee by default, and it cannot be turned off.
Die Office-Suite für die Öffentliche Verwaltung
openDesk bietet kollaborative Office-Anwendungen für die Öffentliche Verwaltung: Textverarbeitung, Chat, Dateifreigabe, Videokonferenzen und Projektmanagement.openDesk
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