Author Archives: pappp

Internet Archive forced to remove 500,000 books after publishers’ court win

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Yeah, unfortunate, but that was pretty much inevitable. The only way it makes sense is if they're trying to make a larger case (socially and/or legally) about the unbalanced state of copyright. Hopefully it doesn't cause problems for the larger IA operation, because it's become essential infrastructure.
Internet Archive forced to remove 500,000 books after publishers’ court win

Enlarge (credit: Tim Macpherson | Image Source)

As a result of book publishers successfully suing the Internet Archive (IA) last year, the free online library that strives to keep growing online access to books recently shrank by about 500,000 titles.

IA reported in a blog post this month that publishers abruptly forcing these takedowns triggered a "devastating loss" for readers who depend on IA to access books that are otherwise impossible or difficult to access.

To restore access, IA is now appealing, hoping to reverse the prior court's decision by convincing the US Court of Appeals in the Second Circuit that IA's controlled digital lending of its physical books should be considered fair use under copyright law. An April court filing shows that IA intends to argue that the publishers have no evidence that the e-book market has been harmed by the open library's lending, and copyright law is better served by allowing IA's lending than by preventing it.

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Phoenix UEFI flaw puts long list of Intel chips in hot seat

Source: The Register

Article note: A buffer overflow in the interaction between common implementations of UEFI - an unnecessarily ugly and complicated bootloader firmware - and the TPM - a security enclave add-on that appears to cause more vulerabilities than it prevents - leads to potential widespread pwnage. I could have written that description basically any month in the last decade.

Researchers discuss it in same breath as BlackLotus and MosaicRegressor

A new vulnerability in UEFI firmware is threatening the security of a wide range of Intel chip families in a similar fashion to BlackLotus and others like it.…

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McDonald’s AI Drive-Thru debacle is a warning to us all

Source: Hacker News

Article note: As I've now been saying for years, my body is ready for AI Winter 3.0. The useless bullshit brought about by FOMO and hype has _wildly_ outstripped the useful advances.
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Section 230 Sunset Act Would Cut Off Young People’s Access to Online Communities

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I think for a significant number of conservative folk that's the point. Awful people feel threatened when young people have access to communities and perspectives outside their family/geography/institutions (read: Church) that might lead them to question crazy bullshit.
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systemd 256.1: Now slightly less likely to delete /home

Source: The Register

Article note: The systemd "You're doing it the way you've always done it! We've immediately deprecated decades of accepted practice after only internal discussion because we know better! How dare you be so regressive!" tradition continues.

Fixes catastrophic data loss, er, bug, er poorly documented feature... user error

Following closely after systemd version 256 comes 256.1, which fixes a handful of bugs. One of these is emphatically not systemd-tmpfiles recursively deleting your entire home directory. That's a feature.…

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Lilygo T-Glass

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Rigging up useful software for this thing is going to be quite a project, but there are a dearth of practical hack-able monocular HUDs, especially since google glass briefly became a dbag signifier then a failure. Would be fun to hook to a bike computer, nice for teleprompter type tasks, etc.
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KDE Plasma 6.1 released

Source: OSNews

Article note: Cool. I'm not happy that they had to do their own hacky bespoke thing to get something resembling session restore, but I've been very irritated at it not being there on the two machines I've been doing Plasma Wayland on.

After the very successful release of KDE Plasma 6.0, which moved the entire desktop environment and most of its applications over to Qt 6, fixed a whole slow of bugs, and streamlined the entire KDE desktop and its applications, it’s now time for KDE Plasma 6.1, where we’re going to see a much stronger focus on new features. While it’s merely a point release, it’s still a big one.

The tentpole new feature of Plasma 6.1 is access to remote Plasma desktops. You can go into Settings and log into any Plasma desktop, which is built entirely and directly into KDE’s own Wayland compositor, avoiding the use of third party applications of hacky extensions to X.org. Having such remote access built right into the desktop environment and its compositor itself is a much cleaner implementation than in the before time with X.

Another feature that worked just fine under X but was still missing from KDE Plasma on Wayland is something they now call “persistent applications” – basically, KDE will now remember which windows you had open when you closed KDE or shut down your computer, and open them back up right where you left off when you log back in. It’s one of those things that got lost in the transition to Wayland, and having it back is really, really welcome.

Speaking of Wayland, KDE Plasma 6.1 also introduces two major new rendering features. Explicit sync removes flickering and glitches most commonly seen on NVIDIA hardware, while triple buffering provides smoother animations and screen rendering. There’s more here, too, such as a completely reworked edit desktop view, support for controlling keyboard LED backlighting traditionally found in gaming laptops, and more.

KDE Plasma 6.1 will find its way to your distribution of choice soon enough, but of course, you can compile and install it yourself, too.

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We Remember Noam Chomsky, the Intellectual and Moral Giant

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Oh man, the world with out Chomsky. That's weird to contemplate. Ed: and apparently hasn't come about yet.
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“Attention assault” on Fandom

Source: Hacker News

Article note: It's the union of a bunch of bad shit. Hosting wikis is ...not actually very difficult or expensive.. but somehow the fandom folks attracted $40M of investment and the investors want returns, leading to a shitstorm of ads and tracking. Leaving is hard not just because Fandom will use hired admins to prevent mass deletion, but because search engines - especially google - treat site-size as a positive indicator, so even an abandoned fandom wiki will be hard to out-rank. I miss the old Internet _so much_.
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Where did you go, Ms. Pac-Man?

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Ms. Pac-Man is probably my favorite classic arcade game, and I knew about the weirdness about it being a GCC game adopted by Midway rather than a Namco product, but this is ..extensive and weird.
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