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What is Lemmy?

Lemmy is a selfhosted social link aggregation and discussion platform. It is completely free and open, and not controlled by any company. This means that there is no advertising, tracking, or secret algorithms. Content is organized into communities, so it is easy to subscribe to topics that you are interested in, and ignore others. Voting is used to bring the most interesting items to the top.

Think of it as an opensource alternative to reddit!

founded 11 months ago
ADMINS
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Specifically, Teams will detect if the user has connected to the company's own Wi-Fi and automatically set the work location accordingly to the respective building.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/51825816

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/51825816

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/44734680

Archived

Experts have expressed fears that the Chinese government plans to increase the forced “harvesting” of human organs from people in Xinjiang, home to a large Turkic Muslim population.

The concerns follow the announcement by the Xinjiang Health Commission late last year that it was going to develop six new organ transplant institutions in the region in the period to 2030, among other measures aimed at expanding transplant services.

Xinjiang is a large area in northwest China where the Beijing government has been operating a campaign of oppression against the indigenous population of Uyghur and other Turkic people since 2014.

The United Nations has said the campaign, which includes a vast network of camps, involves serious human rights violations that may amount to crimes against humanity. “The announcement raises concerns about the ongoing procurement of organs through human rights abuses in Xinjiang, because there is no obvious reason why the new facilities are needed,” said Wendy Rogers, professor of clinical ethics at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia.

[...]

Enver Tohti [a former surgeon in Xinjiang who now lives in London] said he believes the Chinese authorities are expanding their organ transplant facilities throughout China, and not just in Xinjiang. “Xinjiang is just part of a wider picture,” he said.

He believes the Chinese authorities began to collect biological data from people in Xinjiang in 2016 with a view to building a database that could be searched for matches when organs were needed for transplant operations. “People in inner China just disappear,” he said.

“Maybe they are accused of a crime and sent to prison. In Xinjiang, they simply take the person – say they are a terrorist.” In China, “if you are declared an enemy of the state, then an enemy is not a human being.”

[...]

Recently, at a military parade in Beijing, the Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, was caught on mic discussing organ transplants with his counterpart from Russia, Vladimir Putin.

“Biotechnology is continuously developing,” Putin’s interpreter was recorded saying in Chinese to Xi. “Human organs can be continuously transplanted. The longer you live, the younger you become, and [you can] even achieve immortality.”

Xi could be heard responding in Chinese: “Some predict that in this century humans may live to 150 years old.”

Tohti said: “They are talking about organ harvesting. Organ transplanting in China is organ harvesting. They are not taking organs from volunteers. Every organ transplant is part of harvesting.”

In December 2014, Chinese State media reported that China was to stop using organs from executed prisoners in transplant operations. However, Tohti said such statements are just optics. “The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) never keeps its promises. They make laws to show to outsiders. They make a constitution to show to outsiders. Inside the country, it is completely different.”

[...]

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The video shows the demolition of the two cooling towers of the Grundremmingen nuclear power plant in Bavaria / Germany on October 25.

The plant had been switched off four years before. Like the other German plants, it would have required a mayor overhaul to accomplish for modern safety requirements, and it was not deemed economical to do so.

There was a final decision to phase out nuclear power in 2011, after the tsunami catastrophe in Japan, which caused three of the four plants in Fukushim to melt down and explode, and severe further problems with a larger cooling storage for hot spent fuel rods.

That final decision for phase-out was taken by Chancellor Angela Merkel after big losses in elections. Her conservative party CDU was about to lose power. Merkel had reversed an earlier decision for a nuclear phase--out and could not sustain it politically.

And that earlier decision had been made by the former Green-Social Democrat coalition which had been following a renewable energy strategy. Experts had been working on that transition for years and the majority expert consensus was that continuing nuclear energy would not only be expensive, but that it also in the long run would hamper this renewable transition.

The direct, or first goal of that transition was to phase out and abandon nuclear power. But the anti-nuclear movement and the Green party were also very clear that for reaching that goal, something better than fossil fuels was needed - clean energy. This is why the anti-nuclear movement had a laughing sun in its logo, since a long time.

Returning to the topic of Fukushima and Merkel's political emergency stop - Why had this event such a big impact on the public opinion in Germany?

Well, there had been a fierce discussion around nuclear power since the mid-eighties. That discussion had a broadness, technical depth and persaviveness that is hard to imagine in today's world of tweets and video shorts. One literally could not open a newspaper or even a boy scout's magazine without it having a drawing of a nuclear power plant, how it was supposed to work, and what were possible weak points.

One constant argument of the pro-nuclear side was THAT NUCLEAR PLANTS CANNOT BLOW UP AND A MELT-DOWN CAN NEVER HAPPEN, BECAUSE OF THEIR TIGHT TECHNICAL PRECAUTIONS. And that major nuclear accidents WILL NOT HAPPEN MORE OFTEN THAN ONCE IN TEN THOUSAND YEARS.

It turned out that this was not true.

Germany also had experienced the consequences of nuclear fallout in 1986 after the Chernobyl plant had exploded. Kids were not allowed to play outside for weeks. Agricultural produce was disposed of and some stuff disapeared and showed up as far away as South America. Newspapers printed Becquerel numbers of food for months, and foraging mushrooms was discouraged for many years in parts of Southern Germany. And all that because as little as a few hundred grams of Caesium isotope from Chernobyl.

There were also very heated discussions about the effects of the radiation around Chernobyl. Many reported effects in children, like thyroid cancer, also increase in cardiovascular illnesses. On youtube, there are some videos on how this looks - it is stuff for very bad dreams. Most of these reports were disputed on the ground that the radiation doses were too low to cause harm, based on the current scientific models on low-dose radiation effects. Problems were attributed to unfounded anxiety. And then, some people went and illustrated the effects of radiation on insects. Today, on scholar.google.com you can find papers on epigenetic effects of ionizing radiation, which is, one has to stress, still not mainstream science.

Interestingly, at the end of the eighties a technical report came out which made a bit of waves. It was titled, I think, "Risikostudie Biblis B Phase II" or so, and was concerned with what would happen in a loss-of-cooling accident in a pressurized reactor. The conclusion was that the steel vessel would be able to contain the radiactive material only for a very short time, and then would burst, with much of the radioactive inventory shattered outside. By the way, that loss-of-cooling scenario was almost what happened in the Three Mile Island accident in 1979, which, as we know today, also led to a partial melt-down. America was probably lucky that its president at this time happened to be a real expert on nuclear safety.

Another part of the discussion originated from the fact that early proponents of nuclear power, like the Bavarian politican Franz-Josef Strauß were also fans of nuclear arms. But the majority of Germans were opposed to nuclear arms, and these decades of discussion made it really clear that Germany - unlike perhaps the US - could never survive a nuclear war, because its small size and dense population. After the end of the cold war it became clear that more than 160 missiles had been targeting Berlin alone, and each with a destructive force far larger than the single bomb that marked humanity's darkest day in Hiroshima.

There were also concerns about the effect of low-dose radiation on kids. In the Merkel years, it had emerged that there was an unusual cluster of child leukemia cases around a plant in Krümmel in Northern Germany. But its operators denied that anything dangerous radiation escape had happened, which led to serious conflicts between politics and scientists doing the investigation. Statistics were done about risk of leukemia for children living near any plant in Germany, and a clearly elevated risk was found - which cannot be explained by the dominant scientific theory on the effects of radiation. Later, such clusters were also found near the plants in Hamm-Uentrop and AVR Jülich - two experimental pebble bed / Thorium plants. Such studies have been repeated, with similar results, in many places around the world.

Another thread of the nuclear discussion was safe storage of spent nuclear fuel rods and waste after use. Nobody wanted to have that stuff in his neighborhood - especially not the home country of Franz-Josef Strauss, Bavaria. There was the idea to store the waste in old salt mines. There were fierce protests of the Green movement as well as local farmers in Gorleben which flared up with every new transport. Receiving the nuclear waste was so unpopular that the federated state did not want to shoulder more bills for the huge police activities.

Public trust was not exactly fostered by what happened in another salt mine, Asse II. It was an experimental store for weakly radioactive stuff. The thinking was that the salt stone which had been there for millions of years would keep the content isolated from groundwater. Long story short, the mine was under water very soon, and the whole experiment turned out to be a highly irresponsible mess.

The coalition of Green Party and Social Democrats had been funding wind power and solar power in the years before, and had engineered a precise plan how to make that reality. One key component of their policy was to guarantee fixed prices for each generated kWh to solar and wind energy operators - the so-called EEG, or "Erneuerbare Energien-Einspeisegesetz". That was a resounding success - it led to exponential growth, and the scheme was copied world-wide. The following conservative government certainly put brakes on it, but it was not able to undo what had happened. Green energy had become viable.

The difficulty with the hot fuel rod store in Fukushima, which was short of melting down as well, was perhaps the final nail in the coffin. It had no concrete containment and nobody had apparently realized how dangerous it was. German plants had the same problem.

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  • RBI, SEBI ease rules to spur lending, listings, and foreign access
  • More regulatory relaxations likely over the next year – sources
  • India's economy projected to grow at 6.8% in FY2026
  • Foreign investors welcome easing but say deeper reforms needed to unleash market forces

unblock

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the photo will contain no identifiable details unless you can identify me by butt alone

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This isnt to hero worship or anything, I just like learning.

Currently I'm going to check out Han Suyin's books on Mao Zedong [morning deluge/wind in the tower] and Zhou Enlai [Eldest Son] along with Clifford Conner's book on Marat [Its either called "Marat: Scientist and Revolutionary" or "Marat:Tribune of the Revolution"], but that made me curious if there are any other ones about other people like Marx, Lenin, etc. that you guys would reccomend. So if anyone has any reccomendations I would appreciate them. Doesn't have to be anyone super important but I am looking for something on Marx specifically if anyone has any.

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Idk how it took me this long, but I just learned about the Apollo 1 disaster. I don't know the causes [I dont want to assume off the cuff] just yet, but considering I didn't even know anyone died during this period, as someone who has read and watched a lot of content about the space program and such, I honestly just feel baffled how anyone believed that the soviets were the "progress at all costs, even innocent lives" people.

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Immigration New Zealand says 1000 people each week submit photos that have been filtered or airbrushed.

The agency receives about 20,000 visa requests per week, so about one in 20 photos has been altered.

On Friday, Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment deputy secretary Alison McDonald told the Association for Migration and Investment conference in Auckland that the number of touched-up pictures was increasing and was creating big problems.

"We've got more and more applicants applying, having kind of morphed their photos using AI or filters.

"If you see your client and they don't look like the picture, find yourself - if you can - a really nice way to point out that they're not that beautiful."

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I kinda didn't get much love during childhood, so I kinda get obsessed about it. I recently watched Spy x Family and holy hell, I get so jealous of the wholesomeness of their family dynamic, I cried. I need more of that.

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You can find more details about and discuss this release on the official forums.

WARNING: If you are updating from a build earlier than 10.11.0, this update is subject to all those same caveats!

As always, please ensure you stop your Jellyfin server and take a full backup before upgrading!

Changelog:

Jellyfin Server

📈 General Changes
Improve symlink handling [PR #15209], by @Shadowghost
Fix pagination and sorting for folders [PR #15187], by @Shadowghost
Update dependency z440.atl.core to 7.6.0 [PR #15225], by @Bond-009
Add season number fallback for OMDB and TMDB plugins [PR #15113], by @ivanjx
Skip invalid database migration [PR #15212], by @crobibero
Skip directory entry when restoring from backup [PR #15196], by @crobibero
Skip extracted files in migration if bad timestamp or no access [PR #15220], by @JJBlue
Normalize paths in database queries [PR #15217], by @theguymadmax
Only save chapters that are within the runtime of the video file [PR #15176], by @CeruleanRed
Filter plugins by id instead of name [PR #15197], by @crobibero
Play selected song first with instant mix [PR #15133], by @theguymadmax
Fix Has(Imdb/Tmdb/Tvdb)Id checks [PR #15126], by @MBR-0001
Skip extracted files in migration if bad timestamp or no access [PR #15112], by @Shadowghost
Clean up BackupService [PR #15170], by @crobibero
Initialize transcode marker during startup [PR #15194], by @crobibero
Make priority class setting more robust [PR #15177], by @gnattu
Lower required tmp dir size to 512MiB [PR #15098], by @Bond-009
Fix XmlOutputFormatter [PR #15164], by @crobibero
Make season paths case-insensitive [PR #15102], by @theguymadmax
Fix LiveTV images not saving to database [PR #15083], by @theguymadmax
Speed-up trickplay migration [PR #15054], by @Shadowghost
Optimize WhereReferencedItemMultipleTypes filtering [PR #15087], by @theguymadmax
Fix videos with cropping metadata are probed as anamorphic [PR #15144], by @nyanmisaka
Reject stream copy of HDR10+ video if the client does not support HDR10 [PR #15072], by @nyanmisaka
Log the message more clear when network manager is not ready [PR #15055], by @gnattu
Skip invalid keyframe cache data [PR #15032], by @Shadowghost

Jellyfin Web

🏗️ Enhancements
Enable backdrop image rotation in Firefox [PR #7224], by @theguymadmax

📈 General Changes
Fix multiple album artists in card footer [PR #7248], by @thornbill
Update SDK to 0.12.0 stable [PR #7250], by @thornbill
Wraps registration of all mediaSession action handlers in try catch. [PR #7252], by @bernarden
Fixed issue where waiting event is not being called correctly [PR #7245], by @PeachesMLG
Fix unpause and pause references in syncplay video player [PR #7227], by @PeachesMLG
Fix: Add minimum value 0 for SyncPlay Settings SpeedToSync input [PR #7221], by @SohamGanmote
Increase restore check interval to 45s [PR #7233], by @viown
Revert scroller overflow change for tv layout [PR #7241], by @thornbill
Fix skip button not displaying correctly with OSD (#6583) [PR #7219], by @thornbill
Handle browsers lacking stop media session action support [PR #7240], by @thornbill

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submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by Danitos@reddthat.com to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 
 

Hi :)

I'm planning on setting up my home server, and I'm feeling a bit lost.

I currently have a Jellyfin, SSH and Backrest server running on my PC, but want to get some dedicated hardware for it, and increase the services hosted to VPN, Immich, maybe Nextcloud, etc.

The problem is that I have no idea for what kind of hardware to aim for. I don't know whether I should aim for Rasperri, or MiniPC, or a dedicated rag, or any other thing. My country doesn't have a big second-hand market for server stuff, but I that's also a possibility.

Some context on my needs:

  • I run 1440p videos on Jellifyn, so my guess is I need H.265 support. Other than that, I think any CPU will do, and don't need a very fast one. Same goes for RAM, maybe 8 GB is enough

  • I feel like I do need at least 2 hard drives (1 for my files, another for backups)

  • The ability of upgrade with better hardware would be appreciated, maybe another hard drive or some extra ram.

  • Preferably, a rather low-energy consumption drive. Maybe 10 W idle? No idea on this front neither.

  • Budget is around $200 USD, excluding hard drives. I can pay extra for drives, or get them later on as I start playing around and scale up.

  • What Linux distro should I use? For security, I want to run everything with Dockers, so I guess it doesn't matter? I'm mildly fluent in Linux, experience with Arch and Debian based.

Thanks in advance :)

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If you've ever wanted to make Ryu, Chun-Li, and Ken look like MCD mascots...

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175 years ago, Karl Marx struggled to prevent adventurism and idealism from splitting and wrecking the world's first communist party. Today, the Western "left" faces similar dilemmas as the failed strategy of entryism continues to dominate discourse as a barrier to movement building. In this video, we look at the history of entryism in the USA - from the Great Depression campaign of Upton Sinclair to Michael Harrington's conception of "realignment" to the modern populism of candidates like Graham Platner.

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I stumbled across Diode whilst looking for ways to do secure off-site backups (to my own equipment at another house) and it feels like a paid-for TOR (Ok, there is a free option)

I'm looking for any real experience as the site has too much marketing lingo in it:

Every Client is secured with a public/private key self-custody identity

And this doesn't seem very dynamic if I want to change something:

Diode’s Blockchain Name System can be used for Client friendly names

And somewhere on the site it infers unlimited storage...!

So, is the free option worth me looking into, or is it a waste of time?

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Donald Trump vs. the NIMBYs

The teardown of the White House’s East Wing this week is a Rorschach test. Many see the rubble as a metaphor for President Donald Trump’s reckless disregard of norms and the rule of law, a reflection of his willingness to bulldoze history and a temple to a second Gilded Age, paid for by corporate donors. Others see what they love about Trump: A lifelong builder boldly pursuing a grand vision, a change agent unafraid to decisively take on the status quo and a developer slashing through red tape that would stymie any normal politician.

In classic Trump fashion, the president is pursuing a reasonable idea in the most jarring manner possible. Privately, many alumni of the Biden and Obama White Houses acknowledge the long-overdue need for an event space like what Trump is creating. It is absurd that tents need to be erected on the South Lawn for state dinners, and VIPs are forced to use porta-potties.

The State Dining Room seats 140. The East Room seats about 200. Trump says the ballroom at the center of his 90,000-square-foot addition will accommodate 999 guests. The next Democratic president will be happy to have this.

Preservationists express horror that Trump did not submit his plans to their scrutiny, but the truth is that this project would not have gotten done, certainly not during his term, if the president had gone through the traditional review process. The blueprints would have faced death by a thousand papercuts. [...]


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