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Judge sentences Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs to 4 years and 2 months in prison, citing history of abusing women apnews.com/live/sean-diddy-com…


Federal judge rejects Tucson's motion to force Wadsack to pay legal fees tucsonsentinel.com/local/repor…
A federal judge has tossed out a request by the city of Tucson to require Justine Wadsack to pay legal fees for a hearing she missed in the $8 million lawsuit she filed after she received a criminal speeding ticket in 2024. She dropped the suit after not appearing at a string of scheduled court dates.
#Tucson #Arizona

in reply to schnedan

Das Bild zeigt eine Reihe von drei Kabinen nebeneinander, die einen Wandel im Laufe der Zeit darstellen. Die linke Kabine ist hellgelb und verfügt über eine Tür mit zwei Glasfenstern, die einen Blick auf das Innere gewähren. In der Mitte befindet sich eine Kabine mit einem silbergrauen Rahmen und einer Tür mit einem roten Telefon darin. Die Kabine ganz rechts ist eine moderne Toilettenkabine mit einer weißen Toilette und einer Tür. Unter jeder Kabine steht ein Jahr: 1960, 1990 und 2025. Über den Kabinen steht der Text: „Telefonzellen im Wandel der Zeit“. Unterhalb der Kabinen steht der Text: „aus dem Buch „Früher war alles HEUTE““.

Bereitgestellt von @altbot, privat und lokal generiert mit Gemma3:27b

🌱 Energieverbrauch: 0.124 Wh





pixelfed - Link to source

⛅️

📍 Saint Johns River viewed from Riverside Riverwalk, Riverside neighborhood, Jacksonville, Florida



A global agreement designed to protect the world's oceans and reverse damage to marine life is set to become international law.

The High Seas Treaty received its 60th ratification by Morocco on Friday, meaning that it will now take effect from January 2026
bbc.com/news/articles/cq5j8711…



Ruling bloc and Nippon Ishin affirm foreigners’ tuition-free ineligibility byteseu.com/1417646/ #Japan #JapanNews #JapaneseCurrentEventsAndPolitics #JapanesePolitics #News


Running a command only when resuming from the hibernation part of suspend-then-hibernate?


In the interest of maximizing battery life, I've set up suspend-then-hibernate on my laptop. Using a discrete window manager, so I have a systemd unit that locks the screen when I close the lid. After an hour, it automatically goes into hibernation.

All is well, until I have to boot up from hibernation. I'm prompted to unlock LUKS, then I'm hit with a redundant lock screen once resumed. I've tried setting up systemd units referencing suspend-then-hibernate.target and hibernate.target, but I can't get it to kill the screen locker when resuming from hibernation only, so I don't have to type in my password twice. Is there any way to have systemd discriminate between the suspend and hibernate parts of suspend-then-hibernate?

in reply to monovergent

You don't want anything like what you're attempting.

1) Bypassing either password challenge for simplicity's sake is just defeating the purpose of having LUKS on the full disk anyway. Just encrypt your home of that's a problem for you and simplify things.
2) Killing your lock screen from the session manager is going to cause all kinds of problems, so that's not going to help. It's not JUST a plain old process to kill, it's the session manager. You kill it, and it's going to ask you again anyway, and likely destroy your existing session.

Instead, look into Clevis. Pair it with your TPM, and set it to handle the lower level LUKS challenge. Learn about it to understand the tradeoffs in security, but it's going to be more secure than what you're attempting.

in reply to just_another_person

This is for a SeaBIOS system without functional TPM.

Bypassing either password challenge for simplicity’s sake is just defeating the purpose of having LUKS on the full disk anyway. Just encrypt your home of that’s a problem for you and simplify things.


Could you explain this? I do not see how it would compromise the security model since the lock screen would be dismissed only after the LUKS password is entered. The screenlocker is only relevant when suspended to RAM as the LUKS key is no longer in RAM once hibernated.

Killing your lock screen from the session manager is going to cause all kinds of problems, so that’s not going to help. It’s not JUST a plain old process to kill, it’s the session manager. You kill it, and it’s going to ask you again anyway, and likely destroy your existing session.


I am using slock, which is separate from my session manager (startx in ~/.profile), and in my testing, I was able to kill it without issue.

in reply to monovergent

If you don't care about the session manager password challenge, then set it to allow you to automatically login. Then you only have the LUKS challenge, and if you're comfortable with that, go for it.
in reply to monovergent

If killing your lock screen unlocks the system, that signals there is actually little protection. Killing a lock screen should kill the session and log you out, or at least render the session unusable.

If you still want to go that route, you could wrap your hibernation process in a script or use a slightly more complex service setup to kill it once, by inspecting system/service state and enqueued systemctl operations, you determine hibernation is done (not pending)

in reply to jutty

How so? The lock screen is to prevent physical access while you're away, and an attacker can't kill it without having access in the first place. Any process that can kill it would already have access to your session.
in reply to Lojcs

Not all processes that can send a kill signal to another process have the same degree of access as physical access. The fact they are already running inside the session doesn't automatically imply they have unrestricted access. In fact, you could argue no access at all a process has can compare to physical access. So that's quite an escalation.
in reply to jutty

I don't follow your thought process. I didn't say every running process could kill the lock screen or if it can kill the lock screen it can access everything else, I said any process that kills the lock screen has to be running. And as the attacker with physical access doesn't know the password they can't run anything to kill the lock screen. The only way for them to unlock it is if they already have malware on the device, in which case their physical access isn't the cause of the problem.
This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to Lojcs

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to monovergent

Look into man 8 systemd-suspend.service

Immediately before entering system suspend and/or hibernation systemd-suspend.service (and the other mentioned units, respectively) will run all executables in /usr/lib/systemd/system-sleep/ and pass two arguments to them. The first argument will be "pre", the second either "suspend", "hibernate", "hybrid-sleep", or "suspend-then-hibernate" depending on the chosen action.


t. fellow suspend-then-hibernate user.




Omfg. The police are the ones who shot people.



Le service Framaspace de @Framasoft tourne sur Nextcloud. Et saviez vous que "Nextcloud est devenu le premier logiciel cloud au monde à recevoir le label environnemental Blauer Engel. Cette distinction, attribuée par l’Agence fédérale allemande de l’environnement, récompense les produits et services particulièrement respectueux de l’environnement" ? (Source easya.solutions/%F0%9F%8C%BF-n…)



#Manchester synagogue victim died after being shot by #police, as attacker’s father expresses ‘sorrow’ at killings

theguardian.com/uk-news/live/2…

One of the victims in yesterday’s attack outside a synagogue in north Manchester died after being shot accidentally by an armed officer, police have said.


carrier-bag.net/video/vectofas…

Vectofascism overwhelms us, saturating the space with information that exhausts us. Hence the importance of defining it precisely, articulating it and distinguishing it from the fascisms of the last century. Latent space becomes an onto-political paradigm that enables to deal not with masses but with statistical vectors, and to industrialize the production of the differend (Lyotard), making all things ridiculous, equivalent by equidistance. We’ll be asking what kind of latent AI spaces vectofascists use to move from propaganda to propagation. We might also ask how to make life impossible for them.




🦔 Ladies and gentlemen, Spiny Norman.

Guess who gets to clean this mess up tomorrow morning? 🙄 Prolly poop, as well.

😜 I gripe, but I don't really mind.

#SpinyNorman #NotOurCat #HedgehogsOfMastodon

in reply to Fi

No. 🙄 He's not housetrained. There are crannies he'd fit into, but can't back out of, that we can't get to without tearing out kitchen appliances. We'd have hedgehog poop everywhere. Just, no.
This entry was edited (2 months ago)


theportugalnews.com/news/2025-…

Portagens na A22 outra vez no horizonte... nenhuma empresa investe 200M para perder dinheiro.

in reply to António Manuel Dias

@ammdias talvez, mas cheira-me a negociata e quando isto acontece, normalmente sobra para o contribuinte.