• PlayStation Is Deleting Terminator 2 And 550 Other Movies

    How this kind of EULA is legal is a total mystery.

    Sony is contacting PlayStation Store users who bought movies from the platform that were distributed by StudioCanal—like Terminator 2Total Recall, and Confessions of a Dangerous Mind—to say that “you will no longer be able to access your previously purchased content from Studio Canal, and it will be removed from your video library.” There’s no mention of any refunds or make-goods for the affected users. Sony simply says the films are going away “due to our content licensing agreements,” once again reaffirming the fact that you are never truly buying anything that’s digital, just temporarily renting it.

    […]

    StudioCanal is the production company behind classic movies like From Dusk Till Dawn and Cliffhanger, all of which are included in the list of films people thought they’d bought to own, but come September 1 will find gone from their collections. What’s really peculiar about the PlayStation message is that it’s entirely unapologetic, simply stating that “purchased content” will be “deleted” as if that’s perfectly normal.

    […]

    Of course, when you scroll past the endless EULAs when you first use your PlayStation, and click “Agree” the first time you load the store, you’re unwittingly agreeing that nothing you buy is really truly bought, and that it can be taken away from you at any point, and there’s nothing you can do. The same is true of your games.

    […]

    Source: PlayStation Is Deleting Terminator 2 And 550 Other Movies

  • It’s Official: F-35s Are Now Being Delivered Without Radars. Mission capable rate is now 25 – 56%.

    The U.S. military has now confirmed the acceptance of at least six F-35 Joint Strike Fighters for the U.S. Marine Corps without radars. This is due to issues tied to the development of the new AN/APG-85 radar, the first production lot of which is scheduled to be delivered in 2028. The prospect of radarless F-35s had first emerged publicly back in February. The AN/APG-85 is a critical component of the larger Block 4 upgrade package for all variants of the F-35, an effort that has been mired in cost growth and delays.

    Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Gregory Masiello, head of the F-35 Joint Program Office (JPO), disclosed the acceptance of the six radarless F-35Bs at a hearing before members of the Senate Armed Services Committee earlier this week. This came as part of a larger back-and-forth between Masiello and Senator Mark Kelly, an Arizona Democrat and a retired naval aviator, about F-35 readiness rates across the U.S. Air Force, Marine Corps, and Navy, which have long been a point of concern.

    Two weeks ago, the Government Accountability Office (GAO), a Congressional watchdog, released a report stating that the average F-35 full mission capable (FMC) rate across all variants had fallen from 38 to 25 percent between Fiscal Years 2020 and 2025. GAO defines FMC as an aircraft “that can perform all of its missions.” The F-35 JPO has not disputed GAO’s figures directly, but has openly disagreed with the methodology it uses to determine FMC.

    The full breakdown of Full Mission Capable (FMC) readiness rates between Fiscal Years 2020 and 2025 for all F-35 variants included the report GAO released two weeks ago. GAO

    “So, the GAO FMC rate is, they said, 25 percent. Your office claims it’s 56 percent,” Kelly said, leading up to his question. “We’ll go with your number, 50 percent. So, half of the airplanes are not fully mission capable, and I think it’s the Marine Corps that has been accepting airplanes with no radar in it. Is that correct?”

    “We have accepted six aircraft for the Marine Corps that do not have a radar installed. That is correct,” Masiello confirmed.

    […]

    Source: It’s Official: F-35s Are Now Being Delivered Without Radars

  • Password manager maker LastPass says hackers stole customer support case data during Klue breach

    Password manager maker LastPass is notifying customers that their personal information and customer support case records were stolen during a recent hack at one of its technology partners, marking the company’s latest data breach in recent years.

    In an email shared with TechCrunch from an affected customer, LastPass said the breach occurred at market research firm Klue, and not its own systems. However, hackers abused their access to obtain reams of data about LastPass customers.

    LastPass is the latest in a growing list of cybersecurity companies that have reported data thefts as a result of the breach at Klue, which the company disclosed last week. Several other affected companies include HackerOne, Recorded Future, and Tanium.

    In a blog post that shared information about the incident, LastPass said the hackers took customers’ names, phone numbers, email addresses, and physical addresses, as well as customer support case data and sales-related data.

    […]

    Source: Password manager maker LastPass says hackers stole customer support case data during Klue breach | TechCrunch

  • Hackers Steal Funds From Polymarket

    A third-party vendor has been compromised, and some Polymarket users have lost money to hackers, according to a tweet from the betting site. The company has not confirmed how much was lost, though independent monitors on X suggest it could be around $3 million.

    “This morning we discovered a 3rd party vendor had been compromised, injecting a malicious script into our frontend for some users. We’ve contained it & removed the affected dependency,” Polymarket wrote on X. “We’re contacting impacted users & refunding them in full.”

    One X account that claimed there were about “$3 million in losses” saw a response from Polymarket’s head of experience, William LeGate, who tweeted: “We are refunding affected users in whole, there are no user ‘losses’.” And while that’s not exactly confirmation that it’s $3 million, it’s hard not to conclude the amount lost to hackers was in the millions.

    LeGate responded to another X account that tweeted about the hackers, saying “estimated losses of $2.94M so far.” That account, which monitors blockchain transactions, claims there are at least 11 victims who had PUSD, Polymarket’s stablecoin, drained from their wallets. That was then swapped for Ethereum to launder the crypto, according to the account, which provided wallet addresses for the allegedly stolen funds.

    It appears there may be a phishing attack targeting Polymarket users, with estimated losses of $2.94M so far.

    The attacker has drained funds from 11+ victim wallets holding PUSD, swapped the stolen assets for ETH, and consolidated the proceeds into the following address:… pic.twitter.com/6WfS0JhdDG

    — Specter (@SpecterAnalyst) June 25, 2026

    Addressing that account, LeGate insisted, “We’ve resolved the issue & are refunding affected users in full.”

    […]

    Source: Hackers Steal Funds From Polymarket Users, Potentially Millions

  • Europeans Are Buying Teslas Again, Surrendering the Easiest Front in the War on American Big Tech and Nazi adherency

    Did we forget the Nazi Sieg Heil or are we celebrating it now?

    After Tesla’s sales in Europe took a nosedive last year, the company appears to be making a comeback on the continent. While it appeared that Elon Musk’s political maneuvering had soured buyers’ appetites across the pond, time heals all wounds.

    Tesla said Thursday it plans to hire 1,000 new workers at its Gigafactory near Berlin as part of a push to increase production to 7,500 vehicles per week by October, Electrek reports.

    The news arrives just months after Tesla announced a previous round of 1,000 new jobs at the plant and said it planned to increase production to 6,000 vehicles per week by the end of June.

    Electrek points out that this production boost would put Tesla’s German factory on track to produce around 390,000 EVs per year. That is still below the 500,000 cars per year Tesla was targeting when it opened the facility in 2022.

    Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Like in the United States, Elon Musk’s hardcore conservative politics, direct involvement in DOGE, and personal ties to President Donald Trump hurt 2025 sales in Europe.

    At the time, Trump was threatening to take over Greenland and followed through on his promise to impose various tariffs on the continent. Meanwhile, Musk promoted far-right and anti-immigrant movements in Europe, including Germany’s AfD party. More recently, Musk was accused of inciting violence with posts related to violent anti-immigrant demonstrations in Belfast.

    But sales now appear to be moving in the other direction, driven by rising fuel costs and new government incentives for zero-emission vehicles in Germany.

    Source: Europeans Are Buying Teslas Again, Surrendering the Easiest Front in the War on American Big Tech

  • Europeans surveyed want US tech out of their businesses

    Earlier this year, we discovered that Europeans are leaving US tech and switching to more private local alternatives that align with their values. But we also wanted to know whether this growing consumer attitude affects non-tech businesses in Europe who merely rely on US technology for their email, payment systems, or web hosting.

    We asked 3,000 people in the UK, France, and Germany whether they would avoid giving their business to a European company if it used US tech. And a surprising number of them said, “Yes.”

    Some of the key findings of the new research released today show mounting resistance to US tech from multiple perspectives:

    • Mistrust over data protection: Forty-five percent said they were likely to avoid products and services that stored their data with US companies, due to privacy and security concerns.
    • Keeping euros in Europe: Sixty-five percent agreed European small businesses should prioritize European-based technology over US-based ones.
    • Communications privacy fears: Respondents were most worried about social media, email, and messaging apps invading their privacy. 

    European businesses are incredibly dependent on American tech companies to operate. Our previous research found that over 74% of all publicly listed European companies rely on US-based tech services, like Google and Microsoft.

    There are many factors turning Europeans away from US tech, but their concern boils down to a lack of control. At the Open Source Policy Summit 2026, Finnish MEP Aura Sally vocalized the chief concern that this creates: “The EU runs on Microsoft. The US could turn us off inside one hour.” 

    In such a context, European alternatives are not only more urgent, they might also help your bottom line as consumer preferences shift.

    […]

    Source: Europeans want US tech out of their businesses | Proton

  • Spying on kids to save kids from spying is very, very stupid

    The literature on harms to kids from online platforms is complex and nuanced, rife with people citing small, ambiguous studies as iron-clad evidence that kids are being destroyed by the internet:

    It’s a weird coalition of anti-Big Tech campaigners (who are rightly angry at the platforms’ callous disregard for user welfare) and Heritage Foundation-backed culture warriors (who think that if their kids aren’t exposed to LGBTQ content they won’t come out as queer). While there’s plenty these groups disagree about, they share one consensus: there should be a “minimum age” for certain kinds of internet use.

    The problem is, there’s no such thing as “age verification” for the internet. What we call “age verification” is actually mass surveillance [NB which is why I call it Identity Checking instead – ed], so invasive and pervasive that it makes the ad-tech industry’s commercial surveillance look like some kind of cypherpunk darknet pirate utopia:

    https://pluralistic.net/2025/08/14/bellovin/#wont-someone-think-of-the-cryptographers

    “Age verification” means that everyone who does anything online will have to submit to fine-grained tracking and recording of all their online activities. This nightmare is the surveillance advertising industry’s fondest dream, a world where it’s literally illegal to avoid their tracking, all in the name of saving kids…from them!

    So it’s not just a weird alliance of anti-Big Tech crusaders and the conspiratorial right that’s pushing for age verification – they are unwitting allies of the very tech industry they think they’re fighting. Those tech industry insiders are fully aware that an “age verification” mandate is really a way for the government to teach every child how to use a VPN. They’re also fully aware that the next move is to ban VPNs:

    https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/2217934/vpn-ban-table-july-labour

    Tech bosses are the ones sitting on our shoulders saying, “Go ahead, swallow that fly – it’ll be fine. And if you do have to swallow a spider afterward, well, that’ll surely be the end of it”:

    https://pluralistic.net/2026/05/19/shes-dead-of-course/#consensus-hallucination

    Behind them is a long line of caliper-wielding grifters who claim they can use your phone’s camera to distinguish a child who is 17 years, 364 days old from an adult who’s just turned 18:

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/facial-age-estimation

    It’s beyond farce. After all, whatever harms you believe the internet is inflicting on kids – and there’s absolutely some kids who are being harmed by their internet use – those harms all start with surveillance. Your kids can’t be targeted by algorithms without the surveillance data that’s being used to target them. They can’t be funneled into pro-anorexia content or extreme misogyny forums without that funnel being primed by commercial spying.

    […]

    The fact that these bills have the firm backing of the tech industry’s most controlling, most spying companies tells you everything you need to know about them:

    https://web.archive.org/web/20260315022337/https://tboteproject.com/

    […]

    Source: Pluralistic: Spying on kids to save kids from spying is very, very stupid (23 Jun 2026) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

  • Stop Killing Games Legislation Rejected By EU

    Well, this is very disappointing. Over the first half of this year, we’ve talked about the resurgence of the Stop Killing Games movement, which aims to push various governments to legislate out the practice of video game publishers sunsetting their games and making them unplayable afterwards. The aims of the movement are simple: publishers can certainly sunset their games that require backend servers to work, but they should make them hostable and playable through fan-run servers if they do, should notify customers well in advance of the sunset date, or should make or alter the games so they can be played independent of the company keeping services running.

    To that end, the movement managed to get enough signatures in the EU to get a parliamentary hearing, which was reported to have gone quite well. That’s why it’s a surprising to learn that the EU just ruled out issuing that kind of mandate to publishers. Instead, the EU wants this to be a voluntary process, and what it’s citing as the reason it can’t be done by mandate is breaking my brain.

    The European Commission said on Tuesday it cannot require video games to remain playable ​after they are withdrawn from sale, but ‌will work with industry and consumer groups on a voluntary code of conduct for managing games’ “end of life”. The Commission said copyright and other intellectual property rules prevent it from imposing an obligation to keep games playable. It added it would ​work with ​consumer organisations ⁠and authorities to raise awareness of existing rights.

    “Active enforcement of these existing consumer ​rights can also incentivise the providers ​to ⁠offer video games with longer lifespans and explore solutions for meeting consumer expectations,” the Commission said in ⁠a ​statement.

    Copyright law is my reason why mandates like this should exist. Like, American law, EU copyright law offers protection for a work for the author’s life plus 70 years. After that, the work enters the public domain. Unless, that is, we’re talking about video games that require backend support, in which case it never enters the public domain and instead just vanishes into vapor. And that, I have repeatedly argued, breaks the copyright bargain entirely. In fact, it seems to me that it breaks it so completely that works like that shouldn’t even get copyright protections without rules such as exactly what Stop Killing Games is advocating for.

    And this plan for publishers to do all of this voluntarily? Don’t make me laugh. The very gaming companies that the EU wants to take this sort of preservation effort on voluntarily lobbied against codifying preservation efforts. Why would they do that if they were willing to do this all voluntarily?

    Finally, the point of all of this is not merely to make games playable for longer. It’s to preserve them as close to infinitely as possible. That should be the aim of any cultural output.

    Stop Killing Games hasn’t commented publicly on the decision yet. I doubt the movement will take this defeat lying down, however.

    Source: Stop Killing Games Legislation Rejected By EU | Techdirt

  • Polymarket Has Reportedly Been Paying Creators To Post Fake Betting Videos

    In case you needed another reason to be wary of those videos showing people winning big on Polymarket, an investigation by The Wall Street Journal has found that the company is paying social media creators to post misleading content promoting the prediction market. Of the 1,105 TikTok videos the publication reviewed, 778 appeared to show someone placing a bet — but a closer look reportedly revealed that none of the latter featured the actual Polymarket website, instead using dummy sites made to look like the real thing.

    For more than half of the videos that appeared to show winning bets, those bets would in reality have been losses, The Wall Street Journal reports. The publication spoke to creators who worked with Polymarket and viewed materials they say they were given to ensure their videos were convincing and engaging. In addition, Polymarket reportedly also enlisted a “social-media army” to repost these videos and help them go viral.

    […]

    Source: Polymarket Has Reportedly Been Paying Creators To Post Fake Betting Videos

  • GAE treatment is helping people avoid knee replacement surgery

    A minimally invasive treatment called GAE is helping people with chronic knee pain get back to gardening, cycling, and other activities without undergoing knee replacement surgery. Early studies suggest the procedure can provide years of relief by reducing inflammation inside the joint.

    […]

    How Genicular Artery Embolization Works

    GAE is an outpatient procedure designed to ease chronic knee pain by reducing blood flow to inflamed areas within the joint. By targeting abnormal blood vessels associated with inflammation, the treatment can help decrease swelling and discomfort.

    “For treating osteoarthritis in the knees, we often think of medications, physical therapy, maybe a steroid injection, and then on the far end of the spectrum is a total knee replacement. There really hasn’t been anything for patients in between,” Casadaban, a vascular interventional radiologist, says. “GAE is a promising minimally invasive procedure that may fill that spot for people who have failed conservative treatments but are not yet ready to have a major surgery.”

    According to Casadaban, people with mild to moderate osteoarthritis tend to benefit the most. Patients with more advanced disease can also undergo the procedure, although the effects are generally less durable.

    “We find about 70% of patients have phenomenal results. They cut their pain scores in half, sometimes more. We have a few patients with no pain at all after the procedure,” Casadaban says. “Patients that have tried a lot of other treatments and haven’t had pain relief are happy to get back to their normal activities.”

    […]

    What Happens During the Procedure?

    GAE typically takes between one and two hours and is performed under conscious sedation.

    During the procedure, an interventional radiology team makes a small incision near the crease of the leg. Using X-ray imaging and contrast dye for guidance, doctors advance a tiny catheter through the femoral artery until it reaches the genicular arteries around the knee.

    Once in position, the team releases microscopic beads that block blood flow to the abnormal vessels located in the painful areas identified by the patient.

    Patients are monitored for several hours afterward and are usually able to return home the same day. Doctors generally advise taking it easy for a few days during recovery.

    Originally developed in Japan a little more than a decade ago, GAE has steadily gained attention worldwide. Since 2021, the FDA has granted “breakthrough device status” to multiple devices related to the procedure in the United States.

    Research Suggests Long Lasting Pain Relief

    Early and ongoing research continues to produce encouraging results.

    “The theory is that GAE reduces inflammation inside the knee joint, and symptom relief can last years,” Casadaban says. “Four-year data published in Japan shows that if you have one outpatient procedure, your pain relief can last for those four years. In the U.S., we now have two-year data, which shows that if you have a good response, pain relief can last two years. That really speaks to the theory that we’re hopefully modifying something in the joint.”

    Casadaban is currently leading two clinical trials at CU Anschutz. One study is examining changes in knee fluid among patients receiving GAE. The other is evaluating a temporary arterial treatment device called Nexsphere-F, which blocks small blood vessels in the knee that may contribute to inflammation and pain.

    […]

    Source: This emerging treatment is helping people avoid knee replacement surgery | ScienceDaily

  • Following user outcry, AMD reinstates memory encryption in consumer CPUs but leaves them unprotected for over a month

    Consumer AMD CPUs will once again offer encryption protections against physical attacks after facing user backlash for silently removing the feature.

    As Ars reported last week, AMD stripped the protection, known as TSME, from consumer Ryzen processors. Short for Transparent Secure Memory Encryption, TSME encrypts the entire contents stored in memory, making the data useless to adversaries performing cold boot attacks and similar intrusions requiring physical access.

    Now you see it, now you don’t, soon you’ll see it again

    About a decade ago, AMD added TSME to its high-end CPUs. Over the next few years, AMD added the protection to lower-end processors, including the consumer version of its Ryzen chips, a CPU that costs less than the Pro version.

    […]

    Recently and without warning or notice, the lower-end line of AMD chips suddenly dropped the protection, and it did so in a way that was impossible to detect on Windows machines and required a fair amount of technical work when using Linux. AMD last week declined to explain or acknowledge the change.

    Following the revelation, social media was deluged by comments from AMD consumers decrying the move. They noted that AMD’s quiet removal of TSME after supporting it for so long seemed underhanded. The move came solely as a result of firmware changes made in a recent update. With no physical changes required to silicon, continued support was largely, if not purely, a matter of will rather than a necessity required by changes to hardware.

    […]

    Over the weekend, AMD said it planned to do just that in a firmware update scheduled for release next month. More often than not, the chipmaker refers to TSME as Memory Guard.

    […]

    The company has yet to explain why it removed the protection. Critics speculate that AMD dropped it in an attempt to steer customers toward more costly CPUs.

    It’s possible, though, that there were less nefarious reasons, such as the difficulty of continued support as chip designs changed. Another possibility is that AMD made the move for performance reasons. Encrypting and decrypting data in memory creates latency. Slowdowns are the enemy of gamers, one of the more popular customer segments using the 9000-line of Ryzen processors. Since many gamers already voluntarily disabled TSME and had little need for it in the first place, AMD may not have considered the change of much consequence.

    The incident, and AMD’s refusal to discuss it, is emblematic of the public relations landscape that has emerged over the past two decades. Once, Big Tech and corporations in general were willing to acknowledge service and product changes to ensure customers had a predictable experience. They also showed a willingness to admit mistakes and to say how they planned to do better. Now, there’s only silence. As the companies’ power and dominance have mushroomed, their sense of accountability has diminished proportionately.

    […]

    Source: Following user outcry, AMD reinstates memory encryption in consumer CPUs – Ars Technica

  • Microsoft kills Replying To an Email and including the content in Outlook on Mac

    Is this a bug or a way to force people onto MS Windows?

    Microsoft has managed to break a very basic Outlook function – the ability to include the previous email in a reply.

    The issue, which afflicts Outlook for Mac, was introduced in version 16.110, build 26061317, which rolled out to users last week. Before the update, the original message appeared in the reply window. After the update, nothing.

    […]

    The solution, according to one of Microsoft’s forum moderators, is to roll back to a previous version and turn off auto-updating until a fix is released. Great for users in full control of their devices – not so good for anyone with a managed device. Administrators with fleets of Macs running Outlook should brace for helpdesk tickets.

    […]

    This is, after all, one of the most basic things an email client needs to do, so shipping a product with a bug that breaks this functionality says more about Microsoft’s approach to quality than anything else.

    […]

    Source: Microsoft accidentally kills epic Outlook email threads

    From Microsoft: Replying to or forwarding an email does not include the original message in the email body in legacy Outlook for Mac

  • Over a dozen police officers arrested for using Flock cameras to stalk citizens across America

    A police officer in one American city pulls up a real-time map of surveillance cameras, searches for a specific person’s license plate, and watches their movements across town—not as part of an active investigation, but to monitor an ex-partner or track someone they’ve developed an obsession with. Over a dozen documented cases across the country confirm this scenario is not hypothetical. It is a recurring pattern enabled by infrastructure that was designed for crime-fighting but deployed without the safeguards that power of that scale demands.

    The vulnerability isn’t new technology or a software flaw. It’s institutional access to Flock’s mass surveillance camera network combined with minimal oversight of who uses it and why. Police officers with legitimate credentials have repeatedly abused the system for personal stalking, exposing a structural gap between the infrastructure’s intended use and its actual deployment in officers’ hands.

    Key Findings:

    Scale of the Problem: Over a dozen documented cases across multiple states show officers using Flock Safety’s network to stalk ex-partners and conduct unauthorized surveillance, resulting in criminal charges and terminations.

    […]

    The problem emerges at the point of access. Once a police department gains credentials to search Flock’s database, individual officers can conduct searches with minimal friction or audit trail. There is no built-in requirement to document why a search is being performed, no real-time supervisor approval gate, and no automated flagging system that alerts management when an officer searches for the same person repeatedly or outside the context of an active case.

    The result: officers have used Flock to track ex-partners, monitor individuals they were personally interested in, and conduct surveillance that would be illegal if done manually but becomes nearly invisible when filtered through a commercial surveillance platform. The cases are documented in arrest records and disciplinary proceedings across multiple states, with officers facing stalking charges, termination, and criminal prosecution.

    […]

    Source: Over a dozen police officers arrested for using Flock cameras to stalk citizens across America

  • Volkswagen apps stop working for GrapheneOS users| Cybernews

    VW’s app now blocks GrapheneOS users – roughly 500,000 privacy-focused Android users can’t log in or control their cars, despite the app still supporting outdated Android versions.

    Part of a broader data lockdown – VW recently cut off third-party tools for smart charging and told affected users their privacy-focused OS “is not an official Volkswagen offering.”

    Privacy users are fighting back – Critics say VW is violating user data rights and creating closed ecosystems, while GrapheneOS communities are organizing email campaigns to pressure the company.

    […]

    GrapheneOS, a hardened Android-based operating system that strips out much of Google’s tracking technology, has become a popular choice among smartphone users that value privacy.

    The open-source project now has an estimated half a million users and is growing as users look to de-couple from big tech brands.

    […]

    Reports began surfacing on the GrapheneOS forum and Reddit’s r/degoogle community, where users described suddenly losing access to Volkswagen’s app despite using fully updated devices.

    The issue appears to affect Volkswagen’s app ecosystem rather than a specific vehicle model, so owners that rely on VW Connect, We Connect, We Connect ID or related services could potentially be affected.

    Some posters pointed to the apparent contradiction that Volkswagen’s software continues to support older, end-of-life Android versions while rejecting GrapheneOS installations.

    […]

    When XavDub contacted the German car maker, the company responded that GrapheneOS “is not an official Volkswagen offering” and advised them to contact their OS provider instead.

    The timing has raised eyebrows because Volkswagen recently changed the APIs used to access vehicle data.

    According to German tech title Heise, the change disrupted third-party tools used by owners for smart charging, solar energy integration, and home automation.

    Automakers favoring tightly controlled operating systems?

    Developers and vehicle owners argue the move has made customers more dependent on the manufacturer’s own systems while reducing practical access to data generated by their vehicles.

    Questions have also been raised about whether the restrictions align with the EU Data Act’s goals of improving user access to connected-device data.

    […]

    It’s shaping up to be a cruel summer for GrapheneOS users. Earlier this month reports emerged that age-verification provider Yoti, used by Sony, Facebook and TikTok, had allegedly flagged GrapheneOS users during verification processes, prompting widespread backlash in privacy communities.

    […]

    Source: Volkswagen apps stop working for GrapheneOS users| Cybernews

  • Cervical cancer deaths fall to zero in young women given HPV vaccine

    Around 200 lives have been saved in England so far thanks to a vaccine which protects against cervical cancer, according to analysis published in the Lancet.

    The first study of its kind showed that deaths have fallen sharply since school-age girls were offered the human papillomavirus (HPV) jab in 2008.

    Between 2020 and 2024, no cervical cancer deaths were recorded in women aged 20 to 24 – the first time that had happened over a five-year period.

    Without vaccination, around 23 deaths would have been expected.

    “It’s incredible to think that a single jab can almost eliminate a particular type of cancer,” said Prof Peter Sasieni, the lead researcher at Queen Mary University of London.

    The study also found that those children vaccinated at age 12 or 13 now have close to zero risk of dying from the disease before the age of 30.

    Before the HPV vaccination campaign, around 20 deaths every year were being recorded in that age group.

    Overall, cervical cancer is still the 14th most common cancer among females in the UK, with 3,300 people diagnosed every year.

    It is thought HPV, a virus which is spread through close skin-to-skin contact, causes 99% of those cases.

    Most HPV infections clear up without any problems, but some cause abnormal cell changes and can lead to cancer years later.

    The report’s authors expect the numbers dying from the disease to continue to fall as more are given a HPV jab and vaccinated people grow older.

    […]

    Source: Cervical cancer deaths fall to zero in young women given HPV vaccine

  • ‘Youniversalism’ measures growing reliance on personal truth

    It has often been suggested that we now live in a “post-truth” world. People increasingly rely on their own feelings as a yardstick for what is true. Psychologists at the University of Amsterdam (UvA) have now developed the “Youniversalism” scale to allow them to measure people’s belief in subjective and experiential truths. The research is published in the journal Personality and Individual Differences.

    When emotions and personal beliefs outweigh facts and expertise, it makes it harder to recognize and correct disinformation. “That can have serious consequences,” says Bastiaan Rutjens, a psychologist at the UvA and one of the researchers involved. “For example, people could negatively impact their health by following unfounded medical advice, such as we see increasingly on social media.”

    Researchers call this way of thinking “intuitive epistemology”: the idea that you can sense what is true and that everyone’s truth is equally valid. “This concept has been described before in the humanities, by Wouter Hanegraaff among others, but until now there was no good way to measure it,” says Rutjens.

    The new term ‘youniversalism’

    By combining “you” and “universalism,” the new term encompasses the idea that the individual sees themselves as central in constructing and explaining the world around them. The scale has been tested on more than 1,500 people.

    Two beliefs: ‘Truth is something you feel’ and ‘Truth is relative’

    The Youniversalism scale measures two types of beliefs:

    1. Truth is experiential: People score high here if they can relate to statements such as “I trust my gut feeling to know what is true” or “I can usually feel whether a claim is correct, even if I cannot explain why.”
    2. Truth is subjective: This concerns the idea that truth is relative and personal. Examples include statements such as “What is true depends on the context” and “The truth comes from within.”

    “These days, we’re seeing changes in what people believe and, above all, in how they determine what is true. This scale allows us to measure that,” said Rutjens.

    […]

    Consequences of disinformation

    According to the researchers, Youniversalism helps explain why some people stubbornly cling to ideas that contradict the facts but “make sense” to them, such as conspiracy theories surrounding coronavirus or drinking raw milk for health reasons.

    “Those who strongly believe that truth comes from their own feelings will be less inclined to be convinced by data, experts or official sources,” says Rutjens.

    The scale could be of help to, for example, policymakers, doctors or science communicators, allowing them to better assess which groups rely primarily on intuition and which arguments might have more effect on them. “If we knew this, we could present scientific information differently,” says Rutjens. “For example, less in terms of ‘dry facts’ and more through stories and personal experiences.”

    Publication details

    Julius März et al, Understanding experiential and subjective truth: Development and validation of the ‘Youniversalism’ scale, Personality and Individual Differences (2026). DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2026.113820

    Journal information: Personality and Individual Differences

    Source: ‘Youniversalism’ measures growing reliance on personal truth

  • Pigeons lock their eyes in place when they are flying | New Scientist

    Scientists have tracked the eye movements of a bird in flight for the first time, revealing that pigeons in the air lock their eyes in place rather than looking around. The behaviour may help them control their flight, but it could also leave them more vulnerable to predators.

    […]

    Ivo Ros at the California Institute of Technology and his colleagues designed a lightweight rig of mirrors and cameras that can be attached to the head of a common pigeon (Columba livia) as it flies, as well as a small backpack that houses a camera control board and battery.

    They then trained six pigeons to fly between two perches about 20 metres apart indoors, and three to fly some 25 metres outdoors to return to a coop.

    During test flights in both environments, the head-mounted eye-tracking system revealed that after take-off, the birds increased their pupil size and adopted a fixed and consistent eye position in their heads, essentially locking their eyes in place.

    “Whenever they start flying, the eyes rotate forward on average,” says Ros.

    If their heads moved, their eyes moved in synchrony with them. The fixed eye position aligns with the primary horizontal axis of the birds’ vision and their vestibular system – the sensory network that controls balance and spatial orientation.

    https://youtube.com/watch?v=wzb6zAHSry8%3Fsi%3Df8eRsgw7bdeAhjTb

    “Pigeons have been shown capable of moving their eyes independently and that they can be moved by a maximum amplitude of about 15 degrees,” says Graham Martin at the University of Birmingham, UK. “Therefore, to show that, during flight, eye movements are less than 1 degree does suggest that the birds are actively stabilising the position of their eyes when in flight.”

    […]

    He is curious about what pigeon eyes would do in other situations, because all the tests were done when the birds were low to the ground. “It might be different if pigeons were flying higher up, where there aren’t lots of objects rushing past,” says Ros. He also wonders what would happen when pigeons fly in flocks. “Would they look at other pigeons? At predators? Or at something on the horizon?”

    Martin thinks other birds might also stabilise their eye position during flight, including predators. When in pursuit of prey, peregrine falcons fly in a curved path towards it, he says. “This presumably would require the peregrine to fix the position of their eyes rather than move them about.”

    Source: Pigeons lock their eyes in place when they are flying | New Scientist

  • EU Court greenlights France’s identity check rules for EU-based porn websites

    This from a country that can’t keep it’s security in order at all (both from the last few weeks):

    France’s national agency for managing IDs and passports suffered a data breach last week

    French govt encrypted instant messanger hacked (nb – all the data was exfiltrated through a single compromised account!)

    The EU’s top court – the Court of Justice of the European Union – ruled that France may impose the country’s age verification requirements on pornographic websites hosted in other EU countries that are accessible in France.

    France’s national rules requiring any online platform offering pornographic content in France to implement robust age verification came into effect in June last year. The law also included a list of approximately twenty pornographic websites required to comply with the strict verification rules, as part of a broader effort to protect minors from accessing such content.

    This led major pornographic websites – notably Aylo-owned platforms Pornhub, YouPorn, and RedTube – to self-ban their services in France over the strict age check requirements.

    The case, decided on Tuesday, was brought by Czech-owned companies WebGroup Czech Republic and NKL Associates. They argued that France’s strict age verification rules should not apply to porn providers hosted in other EU countries due to the “country of origin principle,” set up by the bloc’s e-commerce directive. Under these rules, services are governed by the laws of the country where the provider is established. That would mean that Czech, rather than French, rules should apply to these firms.

    The companies also argued that the French rules violated the EU’s principle of the free movement of services.

    In its ruling, the Court of Justice said that while France’s application of its age verification rules constitutes a restriction on the EU’s rules on the free movement of services, it is proportionate because it addresses concerns related to the protection of minors.

    However, the Court said that France may apply its age verification measures to providers of pornographic websites established in other EU countries only under certain conditions: it must first ask the country where the provider is established to take appropriate measures itself and must also notify both the European Commission and the relevant EU country of its intention to adopt such measures.

    Separately, the European Commission also found in March that four adult content websites have weak age verification methods in place to prevent minors from accessing such services under its Digital Services Act (DSA).

    Source: EU Court greenlights France’s age-check rules for EU-based porn websites | Euractiv

  • Massive password-stealing attack hits 75k Fortinet firewalls

    If you have a Fortinet firewall, it’s time to stop and change your passwords. Intruders somehow gained access to around 75,000 Fortinet firewall devices and stole credentials belonging to major corporations across 194 countries, in some cases leading to full network compromise.

    Security researchers say that they have verified the data, and the cracked FortiGate passwords belong to accounts spanning multinational corporations including FoxConn, Samsung, Comcast, Siemens, Lenovo, FedEx, PxW, Accenture, Oracle and many others.

    Check to see if your organization made the list of affected domains – and immediately rotate all passwords associated with Fortinet VPN and administrative interfaces.

    Make sure multi-factor authentication is turned on, too, as this type of massive credential leak can lead to very serious consequences, giving attackers full, remote access to not only the firewall but the entire corporate network.

    Hudson Rock, which analyzed the data, said the leak affects 21,632 unique domains. 

    “The scale of this breach touches nearly every sector of the global economy, sparing no industry. The threat actors have built a verified database of working credentials for some of the largest enterprises on the planet,” the security shop said on its Infostealer blog.

    Researcher Volodymyr “Bob” Diachenko first spotted the intrusions and attributed them to a Russian-speaking group.

    “They intercept SSL VPN authentication, crack hashes on a 45-GPU cluster managed via Hashtopolis, and pivot into internal Active Directory environments,” he wrote on LinkedIn. “The operation processed 1.16 billion credential attempts against 320,777 FortiGate targets and 2.1 billion attempts against 163,650 MSSQL servers.”

    Plus, according to Diachenko, the criminals fully pwned at least four organizations, including a Turkish NATO defense contractor, and, in that case, stole classified defense documents.

    […]

    Source: Massive password-stealing attack hits 75k Fortinet firewalls

  • 1.3 Million Gamers in EU Asked Publishers to Stop Killing Games, All They Are Getting Is A “Code of Conduct”

    EC – not here to protect user rights. Here to protect… copyrights!

    After 1.3M gamers from the EU demanded action against video game publishers making purchased games unplayable, the European Commission has finally delivered the answer; no!

    It is final ruling on the matter of Stop Killing Games, EU says it cannot propose legal obligation to force companies to keep discontinued games running. So what’s the solution? The EU is asking video game publishers to write a code of conduct around shutting games down. Yes, the companies responsible for switching off games may now get a seat at the table when deciding how games should be switched off.

    The “Stop Destroying Videogames” European Citizens’ Initiative was submitted to the European Commission in January after 1.3M verified statements of support. The primary demand was to force publishers to leave games in a fairly playable state after those titles are discontinued and official support ends.

    The movement was not asking companies to maintain servers forever, give up IP, or continue making new content. The Commission, however, concluded that imposing such a legal obligation would not be “proportionate.”

    The Commission cannot propose a legal obligation to keep video games playable after they stop being provided commercially.
    However, existing EU consumer law already provides for important safeguards for consumers. In reply to the ECI, the Commission will:

    • initiate, by end 2026, an exchange with the video game industry and consumer representatives with the aim to draw up an industry code of conduct on managing video games’ ‘end of life’.
    • work with consumer organisations and authorities to raise awareness about the applicable consumers’ rights, including safeguards protecting their interests.

    Active enforcement of the existing consumer rights can also incentivise the providers to offer video games with longer lifespans.

    This means the publishers won’t be forced to legally keep games alive with offline patches, provide server software, or offer ways for players to continue playing. By the end of 2026, the commission plans to open discussions with publishers, consumer groups, distributors and hardware manufacturers to create an industry wide code of conduct.

    […]

    Source: 1.3 Million Gamers in EU Asked Publishers to Stop Killing Games, All They Are Getting Is A “Code of Conduct”

  • EC caves to copyright, rules out mandate to keep video games playable

    Dear EC, the rules are set by you. Not by copyright people who are destroying innovation in the name of a quick buck.

    The European Commission said on Tuesday it cannot require video games to remain playable ​after they are withdrawn from sale, but ‌will work with industry and consumer groups on a voluntary code of conduct for managing games’ “end of life”.

    French consumer ​group UFC-Que Choisir sued Ubisoft in March after ​the video game maker shut down servers ⁠for its online racing game “The Crew”, making it ​permanently unplayable for buyers. The case is backed by ​the “Stop Killing Games” campaign launched after the controversy.

    Jumpstart your morning with the latest legal news delivered straight to your inbox from The Daily Docket newsletter. Sign up here.

    Ubisoft said players bought limited access, not full ownership. UFC-Que Choisir alleges ​the company misled consumers about how long the ​game would remain available and imposed unfair contract terms stripping ‌players ⁠of ownership rights.

    The Commission said copyright and other intellectual property rules prevent it from imposing an obligation to keep games playable. It added it would ​work with ​consumer organisations ⁠and authorities to raise awareness of existing rights.

    “Active enforcement of these existing consumer ​rights can also incentivise the providers ​to ⁠offer video games with longer lifespans and explore solutions for meeting consumer expectations,” the Commission said in ⁠a ​statement.

    UFC-Que Choisir and Stop Killing ​Games did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Source: EU rules out mandate to keep video games playable, seeks voluntary code | Reuters

  • EU Customers get worst of both worlds: everyone gets wheeled cabin luggage and compensation for delays is kept very very low

    It seems that the “consumer groups” who have been pushing this don’t get on an actual plane very often: There is never ever enough space for everyone to take wheeled luggage and a personal bag on the plane. This means it often gets put in with the hold luggage, negating the advantage of carry on luggage. So charging for wheeled luggage is actually a good idea.

    And the compensation for delays come from decades ago when you could actually get a flight ticket for that amount of money – now, with years of heavy Putin inflicted inflation and the Trump Hormuz Tax, these amounts are laughable and leave you stuck if you miss a connecting flight.

    It’s being presented as a win for the EU consumer, but the consumer got the worst of both worlds here.

    The European Council and the European Parliament have agreed to maintain free cabin luggage and financial compensation for delayed flights under the bloc’s air passenger rights rules after more than a decade of negotiations.

    Under the rules, air passengers will continue to benefit from free cabin luggage and will be entitled to financial compensation if flights are delayed by at least three hours – a key demand from the European Parliament that was resisted by several EU countries.

    “The fees that need to be paid are the same as those known for airlines for almost 20 years now. It’s a situation that gives predictability,” one EU senior diplomat told reporters on Friday, after the deal was struck.

    European air travellers are already entitled to compensation of between €250 and €600 if a flight is cancelled or delayed by more than three hours. The new text backed by EU co-legislators clarifies that airlines will pay €300 on flights of more than 3,500 kilometres and €600 if the delay exceeds four hours or ends up being cancelled.

    The rules also spell the end of cabin baggage fees, a common practice among low-cost airlines like Ryanair or EasyJet. Passengers will now be entitled to both a free personal item measuring 40cm by 30cm by 15cm and a small wheeled item with a maximum total dimension of 100cm and a weight of up to 7kg.

    Once the new law kicks in in 2027, airlines must therefore bundle both a small personal item and a larger carry-on suitcase into their standard ticket price.

    While this change will likely increase initial ticket prices, especially for budget carriers that currently charge extra for overhead bags, travellers who choose to fly without a suitcase can opt out to receive a reduced fare.

    Consumer groups have argued that charging for cabin bags is illegal, especially via practices followed by low-cost airlines, and that air travellers should have the right to claim compensation linked to delays.

    […]

    Source: Air travellers to enjoy free cabin luggage and keep delay compensation after decade-long talks | Euronews

  • Spain’s Net blocks have a flimsy legal basis, and lack both oversight and accountability

    A few weeks ago, Walled Culture wrote about Hadopi, France’s infamous copyright enforcement mechanism. The so-called “graduated response” – aka “three strikes and you are out” – has been around for over 15 years now, has cost French taxpayers a fortune, and has never achieved any of its aims. As the Walled Culture post suggested, the latest court ruling might finally put the benighted scheme out of its misery.

    But even if it does, there is already another disproportionately heavy-handed attempt to enforce copyright up and running in the shape of Italy’s Piracy Shield. It works by blocking access to unauthorised material using court orders against Internet Service Providers (ISPs). That would clearly be problematic, even if it were implemented properly, and well run. It is neither, as academic research from the end of last year underlined. Since the massive extension of its powers a year ago, things have gone relatively quiet on the Piracy Shield front in terms of new developments, and there are no signs that the Italian government has taken the many criticisms to heart.

    That’s depressing enough, but even more worrying is that alongside France’s Hadopi fiasco, and Italy’s troubling Piracy Shield, Spain too seems intent on letting the copyright industry attack the Internet’s basic plumbing and thereby disrupt other sites, as well as downgrading the experience of thousands of innocent users. It’s increasingly clear that what’s happening in Spain is now a serious a threat to the operation of the online world there, but one that is still little-known. That makes a post from the Disruptive Competition Project (DisCo), which comes from the Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA), particularly useful. Its title picks up on the similarities with Italy’s approach: “Repeating Failure: How Spanish Overblocking Ignores the Lessons of Italy’s Broken Piracy Shield”. Here’s what has been happening in Spain for over a year now:

    Since early 2025, LaLiga (Spain’s top-tier football league) has been operating an aggressive and largely unchecked IP-address blocking regime in an attempt to tackle sports piracy. In 2024, LaLiga and several Spanish internet service providers (ISPs), some of whom have direct commercial interests in LaLiga broadcasting, sought a court order authorising the blocking of specific domain names.

    They succeeded in this particular endeavour. However, LaLiga has thereafter continued to interpret this order as a green light to unilaterally select Internet Protocol (IP) addresses and domains to block, without ongoing court oversight or accountability.

    It turns out that the legal basis of the current action is flimsy in the extreme:

    The legal foundation of LaLiga’s anti-piracy enforcement model rests on a single, seven-page judgment issued by a Commercial Court in Barcelona on 18 December 2024. This ruling should have never been treated as setting a strong precedent, as it was not the result of a rigorous legal battle and didn’t seriously examine whether the blocking approach is lawful or proportionate under EU law.

    As has happened so often in the world of copyright, the companies involved have taken a very narrow, and possibly flawed legal judgment and applied it as widely and broadly as possible, without asking further permission from the courts:

    LaLiga now compiles and updates lists of IP addresses and domain names that it wants to see blocked. This process is completely opaque: these lists are not publicly disclosed, there is no independent technical or judicial validation before new addresses are added, and the court does not appear to continuously review any additions.

    Once someone gets blocked, there is no redress mechanism to remove addresses from the list, even when they are no longer associated with infringing content, nor any appeal process for mistakenly blocked services.

    It will come as no surprise to readers of this blog that this cavalier approach has already led to the overblocking of sites, just as has happened in Italy because of Piracy Shield’s poor implementation:

    LaLiga’s approach has caused widespread disruption, preventing access to tens of thousands of legitimate websites in recent years – including critical services such as payment providers and a national health operator. This disproportionate cost is borne by innocent third parties and small businesses, reflecting a mistaken belief that the commercial interests of one dominant party should trump Spanish consumers’ rights to a functioning internet.

    The second of those overblocking incidents is particularly serious, since it involves a healthcare provider, which potentially puts people’s lives at risk. According to an article on La Razón (via Google Translate):

    During the weekend of December 13-14, access to the Madrid Health website was blocked. While the duration of the access interruption and the message displayed upon entering the website varied depending on the internet service provider blocking access at LaLiga’s request.

    Despite the serious nature of this overblocking, which effectively places the enforcement of copyright above protecting people’s health, the Spanish government is trying to wash its hands of the problem:

    The situation has become so severe that members of the Spanish Parliament have sought explanations from the government. While acknowledging that the blocks have significantly impacted legitimate websites, the Spanish Government maintains that this is a judicial matter falling under the jurisdiction of the courts.

    However, the courts seem to be entirely on the side of LaLiga, since they didn’t even give Internet companies a chance to present their side of the story earlier this year.

    In February 2026, the Commercial Court of Córdoba even granted [LaLiga] an ex-parte preliminary injunction against NordVPN and ProtonVPN. This means the court issued a binding order, based solely on LaLiga’s arguments, without notifying those virtual private networks (VPNs) or allowing them to present a defence beforehand. The VPNs only discovered the judgment through the media and are now obliged to implement the blocks enforced by LaLiga.

    It’s true that the same court has just rejected LaLiga’s request for coercive fines, and accepted that there was a technical dispute over whether the blocking could be implemented. But the refusal to allow the VPN companies to present a defence remains a deeply troubling precedent, and runs contrary to basic principles of justice. Moreover, as TorrentFreak reports, this latest ruling may be only a temporary reprieve for the VPN providers:

    The league confirms that the decision merely sets aside the coercive fines while the proceedings continue, stressing that it does not exempt NordVPN from implementing IP blocks where LaLiga can prove piracy is taking place.

    It is the usual one-sided justice that is typical when copyright is involved. It seems that LaLiga is being given carte blanche to do whatever it likes here, and never mind the consequences for Internet companies and their users. As Hadopi fades, and Italy’s Piracy Shield carries on as before, the fear has to be that Spain’s unconstrained approach to copyright enforcement could end up being worse than both.

    There is currently a rare opportunity to comment on the issue of EU copyright enforcement in the realm of sports and other live events. There is an open Call for Evidence from the European Commission, which:

    aims to collect the information necessary to support the review of the 2019 Copyright in the Digital Single Market Directive, and to seek feedback on the challenges linked in particular to the exercise of copyright and related rights in the context of technological developments and potential ways to address them.

    As well as that general review of the main EU Copyright Directive, discussed at length in Walled Culture the book (free digital versions available), and the issue of live streaming, the Commission is seeking people’s views on an important upcoming legislative proposal aimed at strengthening copyright (yet again) in the light of AI, which is planned for the first quarter of 2027. The Call for Evidence closes on 25 June, so you have a couple of weeks to hone your thoughts and submit them. Based on previous experience, we can probably expect the European Commission to ignore what anyone except the copyright industry thinks, but it’s worth a try.

    Source: Spain’s Net blocks have a flimsy legal basis, and lack both oversight and accountability – Walled Culture

  • Beneath our feet lies a fungal superhighway stretching 68 quadrillion miles | ScienceDaily

    Beneath our feet lies a fungal superhighway stretching 68 quadrillion miles | ScienceDaily

    Beneath the ground, vast networks of fungi quietly support plant life and play an important role in regulating the planet’s climate by helping move carbon into soils. Now, researchers have created the first global maps showing where these underground fungal networks are found and how much of them exist worldwide.

    The study, published in Science, focuses on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, a group of fungi that form partnerships with most plants on Earth. Alongside the research, scientists released an interactive visualization that allows users to explore the remarkable scale of this hidden underground infrastructure. The maps are expected to help researchers and policymakers identify areas where these fungal networks are thriving and where they may be under threat.

    Among the study’s key findings:

    Large agricultural croplands are predicted to have about ~50% lower network densities on average. Researchers caution that less dense fungal networks could reduce a soil’s ability to store carbon, cycle nutrients, and withstand environmental stress.

    Global topsoils contain an estimated ~110 quadrillion kilometers (~68 quadrillion miles) of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal network, made up of thread-like structures called hyphae. That distance is almost a billion times the distance from the Earth to the Sun.

    Grasslands contain roughly ~40% of Earth’s arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal infrastructure. Particularly dense networks are predicted in the flooded grasslands of South Sudan, the Everglades in Florida, and the Tibetan plateau.

    AM fungal networks move an estimated ~4 billion tons of CO2e into soils every year (equivalent to 11% of all human-related carbon-dioxide emissions).

    […]

    To help visualize the results, the researchers collaborated with award-winning data visualization designer Moritz Stefaner to create the Mycorrhizal Infrastructure Map.

    The project offers the most detailed global view yet of Earth’s fungal infrastructure. Estimates were calculated for every 1km2 of terrestrial land, excluding ice caps and regions where data were insufficient for reliable predictions.

    The data behind the maps are publicly available, giving governments and other decision-makers new tools for monitoring the health of underground fungal communities.

    […]

    The researchers also identified areas of concern.

    Network densities in croplands are predicted to be about half those found in wild ecosystems. At the same time, wild grasslands contain roughly ~40% of the world’s arbuscular mycorrhizal biomass.

    Despite their importance, grasslands remain among the least protected ecosystems on Earth and are being converted to agricultural land four times faster than forests.

    These findings support previous SPUN research showing that 95% of biodiversity hotspots for arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi lie outside protected areas.

    […]

    “Mycorrhizal fungi have shaped life on earth for hundreds of millions of years, but we still understand too little about how the infrastructure of these living transport systems is distributed across the planet,” added co-author and biologist Dr. Merlin Sheldrake. “This study is an exciting step towards understanding how this planetary circulatory system operates and suggests ways that we can better work with fungi to help address many of the unfolding challenges of our times, from food security to climate change.”

    While the new maps reveal the extraordinary scale of Earth’s underground fungal networks, they also highlight major gaps in scientific knowledge. Large regions of the world remain unsampled, providing a roadmap for future research into one of the planet’s most important and least visible ecosystems.

    Source: Beneath our feet lies a fungal superhighway stretching 68 quadrillion miles | ScienceDaily

  • Apocalypse Early Warning System by tracking BBJs

    Apocalypse Early Warning System by tracking BBJs

    In the event of an imminent nuclear apocalypse, we suspect that many people who have access to private jets will immediately take to the skies and escape city centers. This site tracks this indicator in realtime. The current emergency level is reported on a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being an indicator of a likely imminent apocalypse.

    […]

    This site watches a fixed cohort of business jets and asks a simple question: is the number currently airborne unusual for this time? It is not tracking all aircraft. The original version used an FAA-only business-jet list. The current tracker builds a broader global aircraft metadata table by merging ADS-B Exchange aircraft records, Mictronics/tar1090 records, and FAA registry data by ICAO hex. The importer classifies metadata into business jets, military aircraft, large airliners, regional airliners, non-jet aircraft, and other known types, then applies a practical business-jet filter. Each tracked aircraft is matched in live data by its ICAO hex identifier.

    The flight data comes from ADS-B Exchange heatmap files. Those files are published in half-hour slots and encode recent aircraft positions.

    […]

    Historical context comes from the same heatmap format. The backfill job walks through previous half-hour slots, counts how many business jets were airborne, and records those counts in SQLite. The dashboard then compares the current concurrent airborne count with an all-history weekly baseline for the same half-hour of the week. The model also learns local half-hour profiles around U.S. federal holidays, so predictable holiday travel is included in the prediction instead of treated as a generic spike.

    […]

    There are important limits. ADS-B coverage can be incomplete, aircraft may be blocked or misidentified, heatmaps arrive in coarse half-hour windows, and the global cohort is a heuristic rather than a perfect definition of every relevant business jet. The dashboard is best read as an anomaly monitor for public flight signals, not as proof of intent, destination, ownership activity, or who is on board.

    Source: Apocalypse Early Warning System