Monthly Archives: February 2025

22 states sue to block new NIH funding policy—court puts it on hold

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: I honestly would feel pretty OK about something in the vein of "Future NIH grants will come with 18% overhead baked in, spend it how you will as an institution, we won't negotiate" as an attempt to get rid of the many expensive redundant bureaucrats at both ends devoted to the negotiation (they'll probably just turn into lobbyists, but it's worth a try). But reninging on existing contracts is some (very Trumpy) bullshit.

On Friday, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced a sudden change to how it handles the indirect costs of research—the money that pays for things like support services and facilities maintenance. These costs help pay universities and research centers to provide the environment and resources all their researchers need to get research done. Previously, these had been set through negotiations with the university and audits of the spending. These averaged roughly 30 percent of the value of the grant itself and would frequently exceed 50 percent.

The NIH announcement set the rate at 15 percent for every campus. The new rate would start today and apply retroactively to existing grants, meaning most research universities are currently finding themselves facing catastrophic budget shortfalls.

Today, a coalition of 22 states filed a suit that seeks to block the new policy, alleging it violated both a long-standing law and a budget rider that Congress had passed in response to a 2017 attempt by Trump to drastically cut indirect costs. The suit seeks to prevent the new policy or its equivalent from being applied—something that Judge Angel Kelley of the District of Massachusetts granted later in the day. The injunction only applies to research centers located in the states that have joined the suit, however, essentially leaving red states to suffer the consequences of the funding cut.

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Cheap Lock Box is Cheap

I regularly have this problem where I have hobbies for which the equipment should be locked up when unattended, and I pick locks as a hobby and work as a computer engineer, so I know how bogus most of the options for locking stuff up are.

I bought one of those little portable lockboxes (Specifically a “Amazon Basics Portable Security Case Lock Box Safe, Combination Lock, Large, Black” ASIN B077K3FJHC), 50% to have a more responsible storage option for some small items, and 50% to see how crap it is.

I knew what I was buying for $18, and it’s still a hilarious piece of junk, because the gates are visible from the top so you can decode it by sight:

Combination is set to “0,1,2” and the dials are turned to “0,9,2.” Note that you can see a slot next to the wheel on 0 and 2 and not on 9? That’s because you can always see the gate when the correct number is dialed, so it’s trivial to decode.

A few points because it can’t be trivially re-set from the outside, you can’t pop the latch with a wire, the hinge pin won’t come out in the closed position without extensive violence, and there isn’t a tubular override key that can be trivially impressioned (common problems with similar products), but that lock is pathetic.
Amazon actually posted my review to the effect, so… I guess also points for honesty?

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UK demands access to Apple users’ encrypted data

Source: Hacker News

Article note: It feels like the last couple years are just re-fighting dumb fights from the late 80s and early 90s where experts try to explain facts to idiots, while startup bros loot society in the background. Math hasn't changed, you still can't make a backdoor for _someone_ that isn't a backdoor for _everyone_.
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Meta torrented & seeded 81.7 TB dataset containing copyrighted data

Source: Ars Technica

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OpenWISP: Multi-device fleet management for OpenWrt routers

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Neat. I really like OpenWRT and I generally hate vendored network tools, a nice management layer hugely expands the reach of OpenWRT to do jobs vendors will try to sell you garbage for.
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I’m Done with Ubuntu

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Yep. Ubuntu has made a lot of unfortunate decisions that steadily make it not suitable for the "Perhaps not ideal, but quick, easy, dependable, and acceptable for anything" task that was it's raison d'etre. Snaps are a terrible experience and are pushed _hard_. I assume from experience dist-upgrades on Ubuntu systems will be breaking events, especially if they've ever seen a not-main-repo package. Debian is forever. Arch does exactly what you tell it. The Fedora variants do what Ubuntu did and are trying many of the same things that Ubuntu is currently pushing, but with less-bad choices in tooling.
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Breaking: USPS Halts Inbound Packages From China and Hong Kong Posts

Source: Hack a Day

Article note: Welp. That was pretty expected. I've been fairly liberal about buying stuff from China for the last few months hoping to get parts in, and the last order from that batch arrived yesterday. At least my prognostication skills were solid? Edit: Aand they already backtracked, because our federal government is being run by thieving chaos monkeys who don't understand how systems work, and don't try. I'm usually yelling at progressives about Chesterton's Fence, but the regressives (these people are not conservatives) are failing really hard on that front right now.

Update: The USPS has now resumed acceptance of inbound packages from China. According to the updated Service Alert, they are currently working with Customs and Border Protection to “implement an efficient collection mechanism for the new China tariffs.’


Some troubling news hit overnight as the United States Post Office announced via a terse “Service Alert” that they would suspend acceptance of inbound parcels from China and Hong Kong Posts, effective immediately.

The Alert calls it a temporary suspension, but gives no timeline on when service will be restored. While details are still coming together, it seems likely that this suspension is part of the Trump administration’s Chinese tariff package, which went into effect at midnight.

Specifically, the administration looks to close the “de minimis” exemption — a loophole which allowed packages valued under $800 USD to pass through customs without having to pay any duties or fees. Those packages will now not only be subject to the overall 10% tax imposed by the new tariff package, but will now have to be formally processed through customs, potentially tacking on even more taxes and fees.

The end result is that not only will your next order of parts from AliExpress be more expensive, but it’s likely to take even longer to arrive at your door. Of course, this should come as no surprise. At the end of the day, this is precisely what the administration aims to accomplish with the new tariffs — if purchasing goods from overseas is suddenly a less attractive option than it was previously, it will be a boon to domestic suppliers. That said, some components will be imported from China regardless of who you order them from, so those prices are still going to increase.

Other carriers such as FedEx and UPS will also have to follow these new rules, but at the time of this writing, neither service had released a statement about how they intend to comply.

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The FAA’s Hiring Scandal

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Oof. The kernel of truth in the Trump bluster seems to be more substantial (and ...true...) than usual. The claim is that the actual diversity effort for flight controllers (to build robust, accessible training pathways for anyone interested) got subsumed by thinly disguised racial quotas by a mixture of metric-chasers and nepotists. And it looks like there are receipts. Fucking up like that is how hateful nutjobs get traction.
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