---
blogpost: true
date: 18.3.2024
author: Tobias
location: Stuttgart
category: links, 2024
tags: links, 2024
language: Deutsch
---

# Links für 2024 KW 11

Zusammengefasst von
[LlongOrca](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/LlongOrca-13B-16K-GGUF).

**[LocalSend: Open-source, cross-platform file sharing to nearby
devices](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39662721)**:

LocalSend is a cross-platform file transfer app that allows users to
send files between devices within the same local network without
requiring internet access. It uses Bluetooth and WiFi Direct for
discovery and transmission, eliminating the need to be in one specific
network type. The application supports laptop-to-smartphone transfers
and also allows creating an ad-hoc WiFi network for large file
transfers. LocalSend is available on multiple platforms including iOS,
Android, Linux, macOS, and Windows.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Lead from gasoline blunted the IQ of about half the U.S. population,
study
says](https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/lead-gasoline-blunted-iq-half-us-population-study-rcna19028)**:

A new study estimates that exposure to leaded gasoline lowered the IQ of
about half the population of the United States. The peer-reviewed study,
published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
focuses on people born before 1996 when the U.S. banned gas containing
lead. The researchers from Florida State University and Duke University
found that childhood lead exposure cost America an estimated 824 million
points, or 2.6 points per person on average. People born in the 1960s
and 1970s experienced IQ loss up to 6 points and more than 7 points for
some. The study suggests that exposure primarily came from inhaling auto
exhaust.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[The Case Against Homework - Alfie
Kohn](https://www.alfiekohn.org/article/case-against-homework/)**:

This article by Alfie Kohn discusses the negative effects of homework on
children, arguing that there are no real benefits and only pain
associated with it. The author states that there is no statistical
relationship between homework and achievement in elementary school,
while in high school the correlation is small. He also debunks the idea
that homework teaches good work habits or develops positive character
traits. Kohn believes that \"no homework\" should be the default
arrangement for students, as most homework cannot be justified and may
even cause harm to children\'s attitudes towards learning.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Microplastics Linked to Heart Attack, Stroke and
Death](https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/microplastics-linked-to-heart-attack-stroke-and-death/)**:

A study involving over 200 people undergoing surgery found that nearly
60% had microplastics or nanoplastics in a main artery. These
participants were 4.5 times more likely to experience heart attack,
stroke, or death within approximately 34 months after the surgery
compared to those without plastic particles in their arteries. Although
this study does not definitively show that microplastics cause poor
health, it raises concerns and could lead to further research into the
risks associated with micro- and nanoplastics.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[A Few Words on
Testing](https://registerspill.thorstenball.com/p/a-few-words-on-testing)**:

The author, a seasoned software developer with extensive experience in
testing, shares their doubts about the relationship between software
quality and test coverage. Despite having written hundreds of pages of
TDD (Test-Driven Development), the author has begun to question whether
tests are a direct measure of software quality or simply a symptom of
something else. The author cites examples from projects Ghostty and Zed,
both with high-quality codebases but fewer tests than expected, as
evidence that testing may not directly correlate with product quality.
Ultimately, the author suggests that focusing on writing just enough
tests to achieve a given level of confidence is more important than
extensive test coverage.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[What really happens to our memory as we
age?](https://scopeblog.stanford.edu/2024/03/11/memory-age-dementia-healthy-brain/)**:

This article discusses the effects of aging on memory with Stanford
neurologist Sharon Sha as a source. She explains that while the brain is
in decline from its peak performance around age 25, the decline is
gradual and not as severe as previously thought. Healthy aging may cause
subtle changes in cognitive functions such as processing speed and
working memory. However, dementia is not an inevitable part of growing
older. To maintain brain health, Sha recommends exercise, social
interaction, a balanced diet, and good sleep.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Integer tokenization is
insane](https://www.beren.io/2023-02-04-Integer-tokenization-is-insane/)**:

The article discusses the issue of integer tokenization in language
models like GPT2 (also used for GPT3). It highlights that the GPT2
tokenizer does not represent integers coherently, using unique tokens
instead of a decimal system. This affects mathematical capabilities
built on this foundation and requires memorization for addition and
subtraction problems involving numbers. The inconsistent chunking of
large numbers into tokens also complicates simple numerical algorithms
like multi-digit addition.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[How to Win Friends and Hustle
People](https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/14/style/superiority-burger-ashwin-deshmukh.html)**:

Ashwin Deshmukh, the managing partner of Superiority Burger, one of New
York\'s most acclaimed restaurants, has faced legal issues with June
Kwan, owner of Spicy Moon restaurant in the East Village. Kwan sued
Deshmukh twice for refusing to provide proof of her equity and failing
to repay a \$200,000 loan. The lawsuits shed light on the tensions
between the two entrepreneurs and their businesses.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[sciimmunol.adj4775](https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciimmunol.adj4775)**:

**TODO**

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**['I know someone who played noughts and crosses on one': meet the top
surgeon who burnt his initials on a patient's
liver](https://www.theguardian.com/society/2024/mar/16/surgeon-who-signed-patients-livers)**:

In 2013, a patient with acute liver failure received a transplant at
Queen Elizabeth hospital in Birmingham. Simon Bramhall, the
hepato-pancreato-biliary (HPB) surgeon on call that evening, performed
the surgery and burned his initials \"SB\" onto the patient\'s liver.
This incident raised questions about pride in the medical profession,
the culture of operating theatres, and whether Bramhall should have been
struck off the medical register. The case highlights the delicate
balance between professionalism and humility within surgical theatres
and the importance of maintaining patient trust.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[What part of Rust compilation is the
bottleneck?](https://kobzol.github.io/rust/rustc/2024/03/15/rustc-what-takes-so-long.html)**:

The article discusses the ongoing topic of Rust compilation times,
breaking down the time spent in three individual high-level sections:
Frontend, Backend, and Linker. These sections help to identify where
optimization efforts should be focused based on data from a fun
experiment and visualization added to the Rust compiler benchmark suite.
The article uses various examples of binaries and libraries to
demonstrate how the bottleneck can vary between compilation cases.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Ad agency boss had two Ferraris but wouldn't buy a
server](https://www.theregister.com/2024/03/15/on_call/)**:

The article narrates the experience of a managed services provider
employee, Aaron, who worked with an ad agency in Australia that had an
all-Apple environment except for a SharePoint server. This server was
hosting uncompressed video and audio files, which frequently caused it
to choke. To address this issue, Aaron\'s team built a file server using
a Mac Mini and external USB drives, but the arrangement proved unstable
due to Apple OS updates causing downtime. Despite multiple
recommendations for purchasing a real file server, the agency refused.
When they finally agreed to buy one, the ad agency did not pay for it.
Aaron eventually quit his job as a result of this situation and left the
server unpaid for.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Delusions shape our reality \| Lisa
Bortolotti](https://iai.tv/articles/delusions-shape-our-reality-auid-2772)**:

The article discusses how delusional beliefs may not be entirely invalid
as they demonstrate active meaning-making, an aspect of human agency. By
labeling these beliefs as delusional and denying the agency of those who
hold them, we risk disengaging from further exchange of ideas and
collaboration with individuals holding such beliefs. Instead, remaining
curious about their perspectives and understanding how their beliefs
emerged can be beneficial in fostering a more inclusive approach to
communication and interaction.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Strontium Aluminate
Rings](https://patrickadairdesigns.com/collections/strontium-aluminate-rings)**:

Strontium aluminate is an aluminate compound powder that is non-toxic,
non-flammable, and has various compositions. It is the most superior
material in terms of longest glow times and commercial availability.
Strontium aluminates are used in glow-in-the-dark products like rings,
which require UV exposure to activate their luminescence. They come in
various colors and can be infused with resin to create solid lume rings.
These rings have a long lifespan and require minimal maintenance.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Ollama now supports AMD graphics
cards](https://ollama.com/blog/amd-preview)**:

The article announces that the software \"Ollama\" now supports AMD
graphics cards in preview mode on both Windows and Linux operating
systems. This means that all features of Ollama can be accelerated by
AMD graphics card users, specifically for Linux and Windows platforms.
Supported cards include models from Radeon, Radeon Pro, and Instinct
families. The article also mentions that support for more AMD graphics
cards is forthcoming, with instructions on how to get started using
Ollama with the new feature available at the end of the text.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Title:OpenVPN is Open to VPN
Fingerprinting](https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.03998)**:

The adoption of Virtual Private Networks (VPN) has grown significantly
due to increased privacy and surveillance concerns. In response, some
governments are attempting to restrict VPN access by identifying
connections using \"dual use\" Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) technology.
This article discusses the development of mechanisms for accurately
fingerprinting VPN connections using OpenVPN, the most popular protocol
for commercial VPN services. A two-phase framework was designed to
perform passive fingerprinting and active probing in sequence. The
evaluation with a million-user ISP found that over 85% of OpenVPN flows
could be identified with minimal false positives. Although some
commercial VPNs have implemented countermeasures, the article highlights
the importance for commercial VPN providers to adopt more principled
detection countermeasures and be transparent about their obfuscation
approaches.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[how the wrong side won at
Boeing](https://backofmind.substack.com/p/how-the-wrong-side-won-at-boeing)**:

The Ricardian Fallacy is a concept identified by Joseph Schumpeter,
which refers to economists building theoretical models and acting as if
the model has solved real-world problems. This tendency interacts with
data collection, as gathering and classifying data takes place within a
theoretical framework that can skew results in favor of the model. In
the case of Boeing\'s 1997 merger with McDonnell Douglas, financial
accounts became the dominant decision-making system over engineering
culture, leading to disastrous decisions without any identifiable person
being responsible for them. This issue highlights the importance of
understanding businesses from a holistic perspective rather than solely
relying on numbers.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[The End of the Dark
Universe?](https://nautil.us/the-end-of-the-dark-universe-531983/)**:

Physicists have found a new approach to solving the problem of combining
quantum physics with gravity, called \"Post-Quantum Gravity.\" This idea
comes from Jonathan Oppenheim, a professor at University College London,
who believes that his theory can explain dark matter and dark energy
without the need for them. Post-Quantum Gravity leaves gravity as a
non-quantum theory but gives it a random element. It combines the
mathematics of both types of randomness into one framework, allowing
particles to remain quantum while still influencing gravity. The new
approach may also change the law of gravity and do away with the need
for dark matter and dark energy.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Titanosaurs were the biggest land animals Earth\'s ever seen,
combining reptile and mammal
traits](https://phys.org/news/2024-03-titanosaurs-biggest-animals-earth-combining.html)**:

Titanosaurs, a lesser known group of sauropod dinosaurs, flourished long
after other dinosaur species went extinct. Their secret to success may
lie in how they merged reptile and mammal characteristics to form a
unique way of life. Titanosaurs originated around 126 million years ago
during the Early Cretaceous Period, with nearly 100 species making up
more than 30% of known sauropod dinosaurs. They varied in size from
small African elephant-sized animals to massive creatures weighing over
60 tons. Titanosaur growth rates were faster than any living reptile,
with some reaching their enormous adult sizes in just a few decades.
Their rapid growth was fueled by their high body temperatures and
prodigious appetites for plants.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Brain Waves Appear to Wash Out Waste During
Sleep](https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2816616)**:

The article discusses a recent study published in Nature that sheds
light on how brain waves play a crucial role in the self-cleansing
process during sleep. Researchers observed neurons firing electrical
signals, which produced rhythmic waves that facilitated the movement of
cerebrospinal fluid through brain tissue, helping to remove waste and
toxins. This newfound understanding may have potential implications for
treating neurological conditions like Alzheimer\'s disease and
Parkinson\'s disease by targeting the buildup of metabolic waste and
junk proteins in the brain.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Trump\'s new \"Honest Don\" nickname can\'t distract from his obvious
decline](https://www.salon.com/2024/03/13/new-honest-don-nickname-cant-distract-from-his-obvious-decline/)**:

This article discusses Donald Trump\'s nicknaming habits, which have
become an expected part of his branding expertise since he began using
it on various people and rivals. It highlights how Trump has lost touch
with his original nicknames and has resorted to recycling old ones like
\"Crooked Joe.\" The article also delves into the numerous lies that
have been attributed to Trump throughout his presidency, including false
claims about his apartment size and success as president. Additionally,
it mentions the legal issues he is currently facing, such as 91 felony
indictments. The author suggests that we are entering a new phase in
dishonesty and corruption for \"Honest Don,\" with Trump potentially
using AI to avoid any appearance of cognitive challenges or mistakes in
the future.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Jitsi Meet Docker Instanz anpassen -
adminForge](https://adminforge.de/linux-allgemein/jitsi-meet-docker-instanz-anpassen/)**:

The article provides a series of edits and modifications to the Jitsi
Meet configuration files (.jitsi-meet-cfg) in order to disable various
features such as watermarks, third party requests, resolution settings,
layer suspension, video recording, and live streaming. These changes can
be applied by modifying specific lines within the configuration files
mentioned above.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Do It Now -- Steve
Pavlina](https://stevepavlina.com/blog/2005/11/do-it-now/)**:

This article is a firsthand account by the author detailing how they
managed to complete their college education in just three semesters
instead of the typical four years. The author shares various time
management techniques that helped them achieve this feat, including
setting clear goals, being flexible with plans, embracing failure as a
learning experience, practicing single handling (focusing on one task at
a time), making decisions promptly, and triaging ruthlessly to eliminate
time-wasting activities.

The author also emphasizes the importance of understanding and applying
the 80-20 rule, guarding sacred blocks of uninterrupted work time,
multitasking when possible, experimenting with new productivity methods,
cultivating enthusiasm for their work, maintaining optimal energy levels
through diet and exercise, and striving to maintain a balanced
lifestyle.

The article concludes by encouraging readers to use these techniques not
just to achieve greater productivity but also to create a more
fulfilling life overall.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Microsoft is stuffing pop-up ads into Google Chrome on Windows
again](https://www.theverge.com/2024/3/15/24101887/microsoft-bing-popups-windows-11-google-chrome)**:

Microsoft has reintroduced malware-like pop-up ads in Google Chrome on
Windows 10 and 11, aiming to encourage users to switch to Bing as their
default search engine. The pop-ups advertise Bing AI and the Microsoft
Bing search engine, and clicking \"yes\" sets Bing as the default search
engine for Chrome. These ads are similar to those used by Microsoft last
year but are intended to be a one-time notification. While Microsoft
claims it values providing choice, some users have grown frustrated with
the company\'s aggressive attempts to promote its services and may wish
for more control over these pop-ups in the future.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Google asks me daily for my location to improve connectivity even if
I say no](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39712637)**:

The article discusses Google\'s continuous requests for personal
information and considers whether or not users can say no to these
requests. It suggests that people recognize Google as an organization
that uses personal data for advertising purposes, rather than solely
focusing on services like email, maps, search engines, or phone
operating systems. The article also addresses the user interface issues
related to consent requests and their persistence in different
applications and platforms.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[New York Disbars Infamous Copyright Troll - Above the
Law](https://abovethelaw.com/2024/03/new-york-disbars-infamous-copyright-troll/)**:

Richard Liebowitz has been disbarred from practicing law in New York due
to numerous high-profile missteps and federal judge ire in cases
involving copyright trolling. Liebowitz sent threatening letters
claiming companies had infringed on his clients\' copyrights, demanding
thousands of dollars for licensing fees. Many times, the photos were
legally licensed through agencies like Getty Images but pulled by
photographers after the licenses were granted. Liebowitz\'s disbarment
also cites fundamental case management problems and instances where he
lied to judges. This decision could discourage other copyright trolling
outfits from pushing back against companies who challenge their demands.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Scientists Discovered a \'Fear Switch\' in The Brain, And How to Turn
It
Off](https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-discovered-a-fear-switch-in-the-brain-and-how-to-turn-it-off)**:

A study led by neurobiologist Hui-Quan Li from the University of
California San Diego has found that understanding fear, an instinctive
response to danger, can increase survival chances during dangerous
situations. However, in cases such as anxiety and stress disorders, fear
responses become disproportionate, negatively impacting mental health
and quality of life. The researchers discovered that a severe fright
flips a switch in neurons, changing neurotransmission mechanisms from
glutamate (excites neurons) to GABA (inhibits neuronal activity),
leading to generalized fear or anxiety disorders. To suppress the fear
response, they injected mice with an adeno-associated virus that
suppresses the gene responsible for making GABA and administered
fluoxetine, a common antidepressant, immediately after receiving a
fright. This research offers insights into the mechanisms of fear
generalization and could lead to effective treatment interventions in
the future.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Does intermittent fasting have benefits for our
brain?](https://theconversation.com/does-intermittent-fasting-have-benefits-for-our-brain-223181)**:

Intermittent fasting has become popular for its potential benefits on
weight management, metabolism, chronic disease control, slow aging, and
overall health. Some research suggests that it may offer a different way
for the brain to access energy, providing protection against
neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer\'s. Intermittent fasting
involves short periods of calorie restriction followed by regular food
intake. It has been found to improve ketone production, circadian
syncing, mitochondrial function, and gut-brain axis communication.
However, the evidence on its effects in healthy adults is mixed, and
there are risks associated with rapid weight loss and calorie
restriction. Consultation from a health professional is recommended for
safe and sustainable implementation of intermittent fasting.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Das Ende des Verbrennungsmotors: Kommt das Aus vom
Aus?](https://www.heise.de/hintergrund/Das-Ende-des-Verbrennungsmotor-Kommt-das-Aus-vom-Aus-9654945.html?view=print)**:

EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen promises that the CO2
limits will be reviewed in 2026, as it is part of the original
legislation. However, there might be a softening of the 100% goal for
2035, but there\'s no revival of combustion engines expected under any
circumstances. The current situation does not indicate an end to
combustion engine bans; instead, it is more likely that there will only
be a softening of the goals. Auto industry executives and politicians do
not aim for a reversal or revival of internal combustion engines. The
CO2 fleet mechanism requires electric vehicles due to their zero
tailpipe emissions.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[PyKidos](https://pykidos.github.io/)**:

This article discusses emojis and their code, mentioning that it is
stored locally in a browser\'s local storage. It also mentions the
Download button as a way to backup data and includes information about
PyKidos, Cyrille Rossant, and GitHub repo. The article ends without
providing a clear conclusion or summary.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Why Are (Most) Sofas So
Bad?](https://www.dwell.com/article/dtc-sofa-crisis-32304b9e)**:

This article discusses the decline in quality of sofas and furniture
manufacturing over the past 15 years due to factors such as changes in
labor, manufacturing, transportation logistics, and middle-class
American aesthetics. The author highlights that today\'s \$1,000 sofa is
not built with the same quality as a \$299 Sears sofa from 1980 due to
cost-cutting measures like using compressed wood instead of solid wood
and employing cheaper labor in Asia. Direct-to-consumer business models
have also contributed to this decline, as they focus on marketing and
social media presence rather than the quality of products.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[How Figma\'s Databases Team Lived to Tell the Scale \| Figma
Blog](https://www.figma.com/de/blog/how-figmas-databases-team-lived-to-tell-the-scale/)**:

Figma, a design platform company, has been scaling its database stack by
implementing vertical partitioning to buy runway for the business\'s
expansion. As the database grew larger, it faced technical challenges
that led to horizontal sharding as a solution. Vertical partitioning
allowed them to make incremental scaling gains and maintain enough
runway to stay ahead of their growth. However, they realized that
vertical partitioning could only get them so far, prompting them to
explore horizontal sharding. Horizontal sharding was an order of
magnitude more complex than previous scaling efforts but provided nearly
infinite database scalability by breaking up a single table or group of
tables and splitting the data across multiple physical database
instances. Figma managed this complex process with their DBProxy service
that intercepts SQL queries generated by their application layer,
dynamically routing them to various Postgres databases while maintaining
strong data consistency and near-zero downtime. The company plans to
remove all remaining scaling limits and truly take flight once they
horizontally shard every table at Figma.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Why young men and women are drifting
apart](https://www.economist.com/international/2024/03/13/why-the-growing-gulf-between-young-men-and-women)**:

This article discusses the growing gap in political opinions between
young men and women, particularly in Poland where young men tend to lean
towards conservatism while women are more liberal. The issue seems to be
rooted in education as well as experience, with many young men
struggling in the current job market and feeling threatened by advances
made by women. Social media may also play a role in polarizing opinions
and creating echo chambers for people of similar views. Policymakers
should consider implementing reforms that address the needs of
underperforming boys in education and provide better vocational training
to help young men adjust to the changing world.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Tracking und Cookies: Dieses Urteil könnte die Onlinewerbung
verändern](https://www.golem.de/news/tracking-und-cookies-dieses-urteil-koennte-die-online-werbung-veraendern-2403-183186.html)**:

The European Court of Justice (EuGH) has ruled that certain data
collected by the IAB Europe\'s Transparency & Consent String
(TC-String), used for real-time online advertising, is considered
personal data under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). This
ruling could have significant implications for the online advertising
industry as companies will now need to reconsider their ad systems to
comply with privacy laws. IAB Europe has already updated its guidelines
and made changes to the TC-String, but further adjustments may be
required.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[HTTP/2 and HTTP/3 explained - AlexandreHTRB
blog](https://alexandrehtrb.github.io/posts/2024/03/http2-and-http3-explained/)**:

The article discusses the evolution of HTTP protocols from version 0.9
to 3. It highlights how each version refined and added features like
HTTP/1.0, which introduced GET and POST methods, MIME types, status
codes, and protocol versioning; HTTP/1.1, with persistent TCP
connections and host header; and HTTP/2, based on Google\'s SPDY,
providing multiplexing and binary format for messages. Lastly, it
mentions HTTP/3, which uses the QUIC transport protocol to provide
resilience against packet losses and head-of-line blocking while
offering better performance in stable connections compared to HTTP/2.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Fefes Blog: Unraveling the Propaganda Behind Germany\'s Energy
Crisis: Exposing the True Story of Electricity Production and
Sustainability](https://blog.fefe.de/?ts=9b0eb55a)**:

The article discusses Germany\'s energy situation and debunks common
misconceptions about the country\'s dependence on coal and nuclear
power. It highlights that Germany is using less coal than in 1959, and
the notion that the country would experience a \"darkness\" due to power
outages was an exaggeration from the energy mafia. The article also
mentions that despite the decrease in coal usage, electricity prices are
not significantly higher than they were at the beginning of 2021. The
author questions why people continue to vote for the CDU and FDP parties
responsible for these misleading narratives.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Winter ohne Atomkraft gut überstanden -- und Strom ist
billiger](https://www.br.de/nachrichten/bayern/energie-winter-ohne-atomkraft-gut-ueberstanden-strom-billiger,U6id6Al)**:

The meteorological winter passed without power shortages, and energy
prices for electricity and natural gas have decreased. Germany has
successfully managed its energy supply despite the exit from nuclear
power. The production of renewable energy increased during the winter
months due to expansion in wind and solar energy as well as favorable
weather conditions. Germany exported more energy than it imported,
showing a significant improvement in its climate balance compared to
previous years. In 2024, gas prices have dropped significantly, leading
to lower electricity costs for consumers.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Swedish data brokers claim journalists' legal protection to evade EU
law](https://noyb.eu/en/swedish-data-brokers-claim-journalists-legal-protection-evade-eu-law)**:

Sweden has a loophole in its national law that allows large data brokers
like MrKoll to obtain a \"media license,\" exempting their entire
business from the EU\'s strict privacy laws, depriving millions of
Swedes of their fundamental right to privacy. The European Union\'s
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) has an exception for
journalism that allows member states to limit its application in this
area. However, Sweden went beyond these limits by making it easy to
obtain a \"media license\" even if the company\'s activities are not
related to journalism and focus on sharing and selling personal data.
One of Sweden\'s largest data brokers, MrKoll, profits by selling
people\'s personal information without any safeguards or restrictions. A
complaint has been filed against MrKoll in Sweden challenging this
practice. If the Swedish authority rejects the complaint, noyb is
prepared to take it to court.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Reverse engineering a car key fob signal (Part 1) ·
0x44.cc](https://0x44.cc/radio/2024/03/13/reversing-a-car-key-fob-signal.html)**:

In this blog post, the author shares their experience in reverse
engineering and replaying a car\'s key fob signal, starting from basic
concepts of radio frequency. The goal is also to prove that most cars
are not easy targets for replay attacks using an RTL-SDR dongle and
Flipper Zero device. The article explains the hardware used (RTL-SDR and
Flipper Zero), basic concepts of radio frequency, and how to analyze and
reverse engineer car key fob signals. The author also shares their
experience in integrating support for this signal format on the Flipper
Zero.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[The science behind why people hate Daylight Saving Time so
much](https://arstechnica.com/features/2024/03/the-science-behind-why-people-hate-daylight-savings-time-so-much/)**:

In the summer of 2017, communication professor Jeffery Gentry moved from
Oklahoma to accept a position at Eastern New Mexico University and
experienced better mornings due to early morning light. As the Earth
rotates, sunrise and sunset occur progressively later as you move west.
Researchers found that the rate of fatal motor-vehicle accidents was
highest for people living in the far west of a time zone where the sun
rises and sets at least an hour later than on the eastern side. The
article suggests that permanent standard time could better align
people\'s schedules with the sun year-round, as scientists generally
advocate for it. However, some argue that such a move would be a grave
mistake, as it may lead to negative health effects and worsen social jet
lag.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[EFF to Ninth Circuit: There's No Software Exception to Traditional
Copyright
Limits](https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/03/eff-ninth-circuit-theres-no-software-exception-traditional-copyright-limits)**:

The Oracle v. Rimini case has raised concerns about expanding
copyright\'s reach through a dangerous precedent. A federal district
court ruled that software developed by Rimini was a \"derivative work\"
because it intended to interoperate with Oracle\'s software, even though
it didn\'t use any of Oracle\'s copyrightable code. This could lead to
potential copyright claims on innovations made by other developers. EFF
and various stakeholders have filed an amicus brief in the Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals to argue that this ruling is not only bad policy but
also bad law. The court\'s decision relied heavily on a
misinterpretation of the 1998 Micro Star v. FormGen case, which could
lead to rightsholders having a default veto right over add-on
innovations, security, and repair.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[AI reveals prostate cancer is not just one
disease](https://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2024-03-05-ai-reveals-prostate-cancer-not-just-one-disease)**:

A Cancer Research UK-funded study has revealed that prostate cancer,
affecting one in eight men in their lifetime, includes two different
subtypes called evotypes. The discovery was made by an international
team led by the University of Oxford and The University of Manchester
who applied artificial intelligence (AI) on data from DNA to identify
the two subtypes. The researchers hope that this finding could save
thousands of lives in the future and revolutionize how prostate cancer
is diagnosed and treated, potentially providing tailored treatments
based on genetic tests delivered using AI.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Thebloke.Ai Ltd - Company
Profile](https://suite.endole.co.uk/insight/company/15361921-thebloke-ai-ltd)**:

The Bloke.AI Ltd is an active company incorporated on December 19, 2023,
with the registered office in Hove, East Sussex. It has been running for
two months, and its first confirmation statement is due by January 1,
2025. There is currently one active director, Thomas Matthew Peter
Jobbins. The company specializes in computer consultancy activities
(62020). Endole offers comprehensive business reports on this company,
including financial accounts, shareholders and group structure, contact
data, and credit scores.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[New Try: Where is the quantization god? -
r/LocalLLaMA](https://red.ngn.tf/r/LocalLLaMA/comments/1avdwx2/new_try_where_is_the_quantization_god)**:

The article discusses the concern for TheBloke\'s well-being within the
digital community, as they have been inactive on various platforms
including Hugging Face and imatrix discussion on GitHub/llama.cpp. The
author mentions that while it may not be their direct responsibility to
know what\'s going on with TheBloke, there is a sense of community
involvement and the potential for someone to face serious issues such as
illness or accidents. The author expresses hope that TheBloke will
provide some sign of life to confirm their well-being and whether they
need any support from the community.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Kant. What is
Enlightenment](http://www.columbia.edu/acis/ets/CCREAD/etscc/kant.html)**:

Kant\'s \"What Is Enlightenment?\" discusses the concept of
enlightenment as man\'s emergence from self-imposed nonage, which refers
to inability to use one\'s own understanding without guidance. Nonage is
self-imposed if its cause lies in indecision and lack of courage. The
article emphasizes the importance of freedom for enlightenment,
particularly in matters of religion, as it allows for progress and
advancement. It also highlights the role of rulers in promoting a spirit
of freedom, which can lead to public enlightenment and the emergence
from nonage.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Why are so many young people getting cancer? What the data
say](https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-00720-6?error=cookies_not_supported&code=795a0525-e6d2-470a-a4b3-b23b8d83a072)**:

The rates of more than a dozen cancers are increasing among adults under
the age of 50, with early-onset cancer cases expected to increase by
around 30% between 2019 and 2030, according to global data models. While
some possible contributors, such as rising rates of obesity and
early-cancer screening, do not fully account for the increase,
researchers are looking into the gut microbiome or the genomes of
tumours themselves for answers. Early-onset cancers often affect the
digestive system, with some of the sharpest increases in colorectal,
pancreatic and stomach cancer rates. Increasing early screening efforts
have paid off somewhat but mortality from colorectal cancer has not
decreased significantly, suggesting that other factors are at play such
as genetic clues or disruptions in microbiome composition. Researchers
believe to fully understand the rising trend of early-onset cancers,
they will need 40-60 years of data collected from thousands of people.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Death by neti pot: Why you shouldn't use tap water to clean your
sinuses](https://arstechnica.com/science/2024/03/death-by-neti-pot-why-you-shouldnt-use-tap-water-to-clean-your-sinuses/)**:

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has warned that
using tap water to clean your sinuses, as with neti pots and squirt
bottles, can lead to life-threatening amoeba infections. Although rare,
these infections are particularly dangerous for those with
immune-compromising conditions such as cancer or solid organ
transplants. The CDC recommends using boiled, sterile, or distilled
water for nasal rinsing and advises against the use of tap water due to
the presence of microorganisms that can cause infections when flushed
into the nasal passages or eyes.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[How to get out of vi](https://liw.fi/vi/)**:

This article discusses the difficulty some people face when trying to
exit the vi text editor in UNIX. It provides two command sequences for
exiting without saving changes (Control-Q Control-C ESC : q ! ENTER) and
one for exiting with saving changes (Control-Q Control-C ESC Z Z). The
article also encourages referring amnesiac vi users to this page to help
them appreciate the editor\'s simplicity.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Prompt Fox \| High Quality Midjourney
Prompts](https://www.promptfox.io/)**:

The article describes a generative art piece with small white specks
against a black background, creating an image resembling a starry night
sky or a representation of a galaxy. The points of light form an arc and
appear to swirl around an unseen center, possibly suggesting a cosmic
event or gravitational pull. This effect is achieved through pixel
manipulation and enhances the vastness and natural beauty of space.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[New details emerge in case of Alaska Airlines plane where door plug
blew
out](https://abcnews.go.com/US/boeing-overwrote-surveillance-footage-door-plug-repair-ntsb/story?id=108084196)**:

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is still seeking
information about who worked on the failed door plug on Alaska Airlines
flight 1282, which blew out during a flight in January 2024. Boeing has
informed the NTSB that it cannot find records documenting this work. The
door crew manager was out on medical leave at the time, and subsequent
attempts to obtain information have been unsuccessful. An investigative
hearing will be held by the NTSB in August to gather information about
the incident.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Extreme
Programming](https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extreme_Programming?lang=de?lang%3Dde?lang%3Dde?lang%3Dde?lang%3Dde?lang%3Dde?lang%3Dde?lang%3Dde?lang%3Dde)**:

The article summarizes Extreme Programming (XP), an agile software
development methodology that emphasizes customer collaboration and
adaptability over following a formal process. The approach is designed
to manage risks associated with software development by continuously
iterating and using established best practices. It defines values such
as communication, simplicity, feedback, courage, and respect; principles
like humanity, economics, mutual benefit, self-similarity, improvement,
diversity, reflection, flow, opportunity recognition, redundancy
elimination, failure acceptance, quality, small steps, and assumed
responsibility; and practices including pair programming, collective
ownership, continuous integration, test-driven development, customer
involvement, refactoring, no overtime, iterations, metaphor, coding
standards, simple design, planning game, user stories, weekly cycles,
quarterly cycles, 10-minute build, continuous testing, incremental
design, and others. The article also discusses the challenges of
applying XP in real-world scenarios, such as the need for a flexible
customer, skilled developers, and limitations in terms of team size and
distributed environments.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[„Der Stellenabbau fällt uns aufgrund unserer Firmenkultur sehr
schwer"](https://archive.is/2024.03.13-081021/https://www.stuttgarter-nachrichten.de/inhalt.bosch-chef-stefan-hartung-der-stellenabbau-faellt-uns-aufgrund-unserer-firmenkultur-sehr-schwer.e289e909-b887-4c34-a26e-c42ec8e52648.html)**:

The Bosch-CEO Stefan Hartung discusses the company\'s mass workforce
reduction and his commitment to fulfilling consumer needs while
preserving its corporate culture. He emphasizes that although they are
cutting thousands of jobs, including many engineering positions, they
will also be creating new roles in other areas within the company. The
CEO acknowledges the challenges associated with this phase but remains
optimistic about the future and is committed to maintaining a focus on
long-term cost reduction and increased competitiveness as key goals.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[New Unreal Engine pricing
model](https://www.unrealengine.com/en-US/blog/we-are-updating-unreal-engine-twinmotion-and-realitycapture-pricing-in-late-april)**:

The Unreal Subscription is an annual subscription offering fixed-user
entitlements to Unreal Engine, Twinmotion, and RealityCapture, with all
updates released during the subscription period. Seats are transferable
between users within a company but cannot be split among different
products. The Epic Developer Portal allows for seat management at any
time. Existing UEP agreements will not be renewed; companies making over
\$1 million in annual revenue must purchase Unreal Subscription seats,
while those under this threshold can use the engine for free if they are
not developing applications licensed to third parties and incorporating
Unreal Engine code at runtime. Twinmotion and RealityCapture will be
included with the subscription without additional cost.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[UC Irvine study: vehicle brakes produce charged particles that may
harm public
health](https://news.uci.edu/2024/03/12/uc-irvine-study-vehicle-brakes-produce-charged-particles-that-may-harm-public-health/)**:

Researchers from the University of California, Irvine have discovered
that up to 80% of aerosol particles emitted during light braking have an
electric charge, which could potentially be exploited to help reduce air
pollution from vehicles. This information could lead to strategies for
reducing emissions from brake use, alongside tailpipe emissions, as
electric cars become more common. The study highlights the issue of
public health risks posed by brake emissions in high-traffic areas and
suggests that these particles may induce oxidative stress, but further
research is needed to understand their full impact on health.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[DMCA Notices Took Down 20,517 GitHub Projects Last Year \*
TorrentFreak](https://torrentfreak.com/dmca-notices-took-down-20517-github-projects-last-year-240308/)**:

GitHub, the largest development platform with over 420 million code
repositories, occasionally faces copyright infringement issues. Pirate
Devs, which uses code without permission from creators or stores pirated
books and music on the site, has led to takedown requests. The platform
processed around 2,000 takedown notices in 2023, affecting 20,517
repositories. GitHub will continue its developer-first content
moderation approach while protecting developer privacy. GitHub\'s
transparency report highlights the increasing number of circumvention
notices, which has prompted an investigation into why this is occurring.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Neue Studie zu \"Nächtlicher Gehirnwäsche\" schließt
Forschungslücke](https://www.heise.de/hintergrund/Geschirrspueler-Effekt-im-Gehirn-wehrt-Krankheiten-ab-9651594.html?view=print)**:

During sleep, the brain cleans out waste products and toxins using
rhythmic pulses from glial cells in a process similar to washing dishes.
This prevents the development of diseases like Alzheimer\'s. In recent
studies with mice conducted by researchers at Washington University
School of Medicine, it has been discovered how the brain initiates this
cleansing process. The findings were published in February in the
scientific journal \"Nature\". The brain needs many nutrients for its
energy-intensive tasks such as thinking, planning and problem solving,
which leads to a buildup of waste products like proteins and messenger
substances. If these wastes are not removed, they can accumulate and
contribute to neurodegenerative diseases. It was previously unclear how
the brain\'s waste removal process worked since it does not possess an
equivalent of the body\'s lymphatic system that handles waste disposal.
In 2013, researchers at the University of Rochester Medical Center in
New York discovered that the brain has its own unique waste disposal
system which they named \"glymphatic system\". This is derived from
\"Glia-dependent lymphatic transport\" because it involves specialized
glial cells forming channels between neurons and around blood vessels.
These channels are filled with cerebrospinal fluid, the same fluid that
surrounds the brain externally. To initiate the cleaning process, glial
cells send coordinated electrical signals which then create rhythmic
waves in the brain\'s fluid. This study shows that these wave-like
pulses actually facilitate waste transport. The researchers found that
during sleep cycles, the pulsation pattern changes and higher brain
waves with greater amplitude move the fluid more forcefully. It is
thought that the brain cleansing process resembles dishwashing, starting
with large, slow rhythmic movements to remove loose debris, followed by
smaller areas with faster motions for stubborn residue. This study
suggests that the brain may adjust the intensity of its cleaning based
on the type and amount of waste materials present. Dr. Albrecht Vorster
from the University Hospital in Bern praised the publication, stating
that since the first description of the glymphatic system several
research groups have found evidence supporting this theory, despite some
details still being unclear. This study helps close one of those gaps by
describing a possible mechanism for the brain\'s cleaning process and
highlights the importance of regular, restful sleep in preventing
neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer\'s disease and Parkinson\'s
disease.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[The untold story of Kickstarter's crypto Hail Mary---and the secret
\$100 million a16z-led investment to save its fading
brand](https://fortune.com/crypto/2024/03/11/kickstarter-blockchain-a16z-crypto-secret-investment-chris-dixon/)**:

The crowdfunding startup Kickstarter received a \$100 million investment
from venture firm Andreessen Horowitz in early 2021, as part of an
attempt to pivot towards blockchain technology. However, the company\'s
decision to explore blockchain led to a backlash from its community of
creators and fans, resulting in a loss of major projects and significant
reputational damage that Kickstarter has yet to recover from. The
investment was intended to help the company return to relevance but
ultimately proved disruptive instead, highlighting the challenges faced
by startups attempting to maintain their do-gooder mission while
operating under venture capital funding.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Someone in IT trolled me for over a decade. Have I any
recourse?](https://old.reddit.com/r/LegalAdviceUK/comments/1bcvj6f/someone_in_it_trolled_me_for_over_a_decade_have_i/)**:

The author worked in a medium-sized firm and experienced constant
mistakes from 2014 to January 2024, which impacted their professional
life negatively. They felt like they were going crazy due to these
errors. In February 2024, the IT guy, Bob, left the company after facing
disciplinary action. A new IT guy later showed the author records of Bob
sabotaging his work. Bob had been accessing and editing the author\'s
system for a decade. The consequences faced by the author include not
being allowed to work from home due to perceived unreliability,
overlooking for promotion, and undergoing assessments for ADHD and
early-onset Alzheimer\'s. After speaking with HR, the author was allowed
to work from home again, had their PIP removed, and received an apology.
The old IT guy has moved out of the UK, leaving the author wondering if
there is any legal action that can be taken against him.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[I no longer maintain my Emacs projects on
SourceHut](https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2024-01-27-sourcehut-no-more/)**:

The author has decided to move their Emacs projects back to GitLab due
to various issues they experienced with SourceHut, such as an
unintuitive web interface, difficulties in coordinating work between
repositories, and problems with mailing lists. They plan to delete the
Git repositories on SourceHut and continue using GitLab and GitHub as
primary sources for their code. The author also intends to eventually
ask people to use other media for communication, but will still reply to
messages sent via mailing lists.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[The internet is slipping out of our
reach](https://injuly.in/blog/darker-internet/index.html)**:

The internet is becoming dominated by SEO-hacked content farms, leading
to a shrinking diversity in online content and an increase in
AI-generated spam. As search engines prioritize paid results, ads, and
trackers over organic content, users are being directed away from
meaningful discussions on specific websites. The article warns that as
the internet becomes saturated with AI-generated content, human
interaction will be limited to small, heavily moderated groups, further
diminishing online diversity.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Lie-to-children](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lie-to-children)**:

The concept of a lie-to-children is a simplified, technically incorrect
explanation used as a teaching method in various fields such as biology,
evolution, bioinformatics, and the social sciences. Educators who employ
these lies do not intend to deceive but instead aim to make complex
subjects easier for learners to understand initially before building
upon their knowledge over time. The term was first discussed by
scientist Jack Cohen and mathematician Ian Stewart in 1994 in the book
\"The Collapse of Chaos: Discovering Simplicity in a Complex World.\"
They elaborated on this concept in their subsequent work, stating that
reducing complex concepts during education is inherently difficult. This
technique has been widely incorporated by academics and educators to
facilitate initial comprehension and foster learning capacity expansion
among students.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Fefes Blog: C++ Under Fire: A Decade of Unresolved Issues and the
Struggle for Renewal](https://blog.fefe.de/?ts=9b0eebc2)**:

C++ has come under fire recently, with even the White House criticizing
it. It is a huge mess of components, half deprecated and the other half
smelling bad. C++ has attempted multiple renewal efforts that mostly
ended in failure or made things worse. Templates were meant as a
replacement for C preprocessors but became template-metaprogramming,
which is not a joke but a serious issue. std::vector was supposed to
replace C arrays with no range checking, making it worse than C arrays,
and std::span was supposed to replace pointer arithmetics but ended up
being worse due to its removal of range checking. Iterators were meant
as a replacement for pointer arithmetic but do not have range checking
or memory management. C++ has only recently addressed issues concerning
memory models and type systems.

The author has tried using C++, but their published code is in C,
despite the availability of dietlibc++ for C++. The documentation and
reference implementation of exception handling are considered unhelpful.
The C++ community is starting to understand that they need to address
their problems. Herb Sutter, a respected Microsoft employee on the C++
committee, has tried to fix the issues, but ultimately, C++\'s solutions
only lead to more complexity and problems. If your solution needs
hundreds of pages of description or is not fitting in a beer mat, it is
not a solution but another problem.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[The later we meet someone in a sequence, the more negatively we
describe them](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39672111)**:

The study found that people tend to view the first few candidates they
interview positively, but as the process progresses, their descriptions
become increasingly negative. This phenomenon, known as sequential
anchoring, has implications for job interviews and other decision-making
processes where order plays a role. To counteract this bias, it\'s
crucial to approach each candidate with an open mind and consider their
individual qualifications rather than making comparisons with previous
candidates.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[A new study finds that the later we meet someone in a sequence, the
more negatively we describe
them](https://suchscience.org/people-encountered-later-in-a-sequence-described-more-negatively/)**:

A new study published in the Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology on February 29, 2024 has found that individuals encountered
later in a sequence are more likely to be described negatively due to
unconscious bias. The researchers coined this phenomenon the \"serial
position-negativity effect\" and conducted studies with participants
describing people based on their Facebook profiles or watching short
video clips of women introducing themselves on TV show, The Bachelor. As
the sequence progressed, descriptions became increasingly negative. The
study suggests that this unconscious bias could disadvantage those who
are evaluated later in a sequence, such as job applicants and
contestants on reality shows.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Create More Than You Consume if You Want to Worry Less and Feel More
Fulfilled --- OMAR
ITANI](https://www.omaritani.com/blog/create-more-consume-less)**:

This article discusses the mental and emotional impact of living through
a pandemic while emphasizing the importance of creative activities for
stress relief and overall wellbeing. It highlights that consuming media
is not the same as engaging in creativity, which can lead to personal
growth and self-expression. The article provides three steps to help
individuals begin incorporating more creativity into their lives: choose
an activity they enjoy, block time for it and protect it from
distractions, and practice self-compassion while allowing themselves to
grow.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[4: Nature Conformable to Herself --- SFI
Press](https://www.sfipress.org/4-nature-conformable-to-herself)**:

The article discusses the self-similarity of fundamental physical laws
that dictates the continued usefulness of mathematics. It argues that
when we look at complex systems, astonishing power laws extend over many
orders of magnitude, often with a consistent mechanism behind them. The
renormalization group, which was initially developed for quantum field
theory, has been found to apply to numerous other subjects. This
self-similarity is present not only in scaling behavior but also in the
occurrence of similar phenomenological laws across different areas. It
suggests that there may be something important about the nature of
mathematics itself and its role in understanding the world.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Cloning a laptop over NVME
TCP](https://copyninja.in/blog/clone_laptop_nvmet.html)**:

The author recently got a new laptop and wanted to set it up
efficiently. They discussed with their colleague the idea of copying an
entire disk over USB, but had concerns about encryption and
compatibility issues. The colleague suggested using NVME over TCP to
expose the disk, connect it over the network, do a full disk copy,
resize the partition, resizing LUKS container, and finally resizing the
BTRFS root disk on the new laptop. The entire process saved time
compared to setting up a new laptop from scratch.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[An Introduction to Knowledge Graphs -
TextMine](https://textmine.com/post/an-introduction-to-knowledge-graphs)**:

Knowledge graphs are structured representations of knowledge that
display connections and relationships between individual points of data.
They are composed of nodes (entities), edges (connections), and triples
(subject-predicate-object). Knowledge graphs can be used in various
industries, including e-commerce, financial services, and document
management, for applications such as personalized recommendations,
inventory organization, risk management, fraud detection, and natural
language processing.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Fefes Blog: States Aim to Enhance Digital Defenses: Free IT Security
Checks Offered for 205 NRW Communities Amidst Cyber
Threats](https://blog.fefe.de/?ts=9b101de1)**:

In this article, the author discusses the issue of IT security in 205
municipalities in North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) and suggests that many
municipalities are having their IT systems tested to improve protection
against future attacks. The state government is paying for these tests.
The author offers two suggestions for improvement: first, save money by
not conducting the test if it has already been done; second, use a
Linux-based solution with complete lockdown and read-only images that
are automatically updated and distributed.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[European Commission's use of Microsoft 365 infringes data protection
law for EU institutions and
bodies](https://www.edps.europa.eu/press-publications/press-news/press-releases/2024/european-commissions-use-microsoft-365-infringes-data-protection-law-eu-institutions-and-bodies_en)**:

The European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS) has found that the
European Commission\'s use of Microsoft 365 infringes data protection
laws for EU institutions and bodies. In its decision, the EDPS imposes
corrective measures on the Commission, requiring it to suspend all data
flows resulting from using Microsoft 365 outside the EU/EEA by December
2024 and bring these operations into compliance with Regulation (EU)
2018/1725. This follows an investigation opened in May 2021, following
the Schrems II judgment, to verify the Commission\'s compliance with
previous recommendations issued by the EDPS on using Microsoft products
and services by EU institutions and bodies.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Tooths by
\@aheimbuch](https://chaos.social/@aheimbuch/112078591995133872)**:

The Podlove Web Player WordPress plugin experienced a security concern
that allowed unauthorized access to its settings via an API
vulnerability. However, the report turned out not to be an actual issue;
rather, it worked as intended. The author raises concerns over
Patchstack\'s handling of security reports and emphasizes considering
alternative solutions for managing WordPress plugins outside of the
platform itself.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Breaking Down Tasks - Jacob
Kaplan-Moss](https://jacobian.org/2024/mar/11/breaking-down-tasks/)**:

This article discusses the process of breaking down a software project
into clearly defined tasks for better estimation and planning. The
author provides an example of building a personal streak tracker,
detailing each step in the development process and explaining how to
break down tasks. They emphasize that there is no one-size-fits-all
definition of \"sufficiently defined\" but suggest using this
definition: A task is sufficiently defined if the person working on the
task can answer \"yes\" to four questions about understanding what
change is desired, knowing what \"done\" looks like, defining all the
steps needed to complete the task, and having all necessary information.
The author also mentions that breaking down tasks is a skill that takes
practice and should be practiced in safe learning environments for
improvement.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Ultra-processed food exposure and adverse health outcomes: umbrella
review of epidemiological
meta-analyses](https://www.bmj.com/content/384/bmj-2023-077310)**:

This article is a comprehensive umbrella review that evaluates the
evidence provided by meta-analyses of observational epidemiological
studies exploring the associations between exposure to ultra-processed
food and the risk of adverse health outcomes. The study aimed to provide
insights into these associations, evaluate the credibility of the
evidence, and inform public health policies and strategies.

The review identified 45 unique pooled analyses, including 13
dose-response associations and 32 non-dose-response associations,
encompassing a total population of 9,888,373 participants across various
health parameters related to mortality, cancer, and mental, respiratory,
cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, and metabolic health outcomes. The
data were extracted from original research articles included in the
pooled analyses, which primarily involved prospective cohort,
case-control, and cross-sectional study designs.

The findings of the review indicate that greater exposure to
ultra-processed foods is consistently associated with a higher risk of
adverse health outcomes (71% of outcomes). The evidence classification
criteria assessments graded 9% of pooled analyses as providing
convincing evidence, including associations with cardiovascular disease
related mortality, common mental disorder outcomes, and type 2 diabetes
(dose-response). Additionally, 16% of pooled analyses were graded as
highly suggestive evidence, encompassing risks such as all-cause
mortality, heart disease related mortality, adverse sleep outcomes,
wheezing, obesity, and type 2 diabetes.

The review also highlighted the potential mechanisms linking
ultra-processed dietary patterns to poor health and early death,
including differences in nutrient profiles, displacement of
non-ultra-processed foods from the diet, alterations to the food matrix
during intensive processing, and the presence of additives and
contaminants.

The study\'s policy implications emphasize the need for public health
measures promoting a reduction or avoidance of ultra-processed products,
such as taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages and ultra-processed foods,
marketing restrictions, and bans in schools. The authors recommend
urgent mechanistic research and the development and evaluation of
comprehensive population-based and public health strategies aimed at
targeting and reducing dietary exposure to ultra-processed foods for
improved human health.

In conclusion, this umbrella review provides a systematic synthesis of
the role of ultra-processed dietary patterns in chronic disease
outcomes, suggesting that higher consumption of such foods within
broader dietary patterns may have synergistic or compounded consequences
compared with lower intakes. The findings support recommendations to
consider overall diet quality in nutritional epidemiology and advocate
for public health actions that seek to target and minimize
ultra-processed food consumption for improved population health.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[President Biden Outlines Vision for Higher, More Complicated Taxes in
State of the Union Address and FY 2025
Budget](https://taxfoundation.org/research/all/federal/biden-budget-2025-tax-proposals/)**:

President Biden\'s 2024 State of the Union Address presented a vision of
higher taxes for American businesses and high earners, combined with
carveouts, credits, and more complex rules for taxpayers at all income
levels. The proposed budget for fiscal year 2025 outlines how the White
House would implement these tax hikes, amounting to a gross tax hike
exceeding \$5.1 trillion over 10 years. Rather than aiming for a simpler
tax code that encourages investment, saving, and work in the United
States, Biden\'s plan promises higher taxes that would decrease economic
output and incomes, reduce US competitiveness, and further complicate
the tax code. Critics argue that the president\'s tax policy proposals
make the tax code more complicated, unstable, and anti-growth while
expanding spending for various policies not related to revenue
collection.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[A Swimming Dinosaur? Maybe Not, Study
Says](https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/06/science/spinosaurus-dinosaur-fossil-dive.html)**:

A new paper challenges the idea that Spinosaurus, one of the largest
carnivorous dinosaurs, dove after prey rather than wading and plucking
it out of the water. The study, published in PLOS One, argues against
earlier research suggesting that the dinosaur had dense bones like those
of animals that spend much of their time in the water. Critics say the
density analysis is \"statistically absurd\" and the ungainly body shape
would have made Spinosaurus a poor swimmer if it could swim at all. The
debate among experts continues on whether this dinosaur was an
exceptional swimmer or not.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[The SELF
Framework](https://probablygood.org/core-concepts/self-framework/)**:

The SELF framework is a tool to help individuals assess the potential
impact of a specific job role. It considers four major factors:
Significance of the problem, Efficacy of the method or intervention,
Leverage of your specific role within the problem, and Fit of your
strengths & interests for the job. By considering these factors,
individuals can make more informed decisions about whether a job truly
makes a difference in the world.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**[Webb & Hubble confirm Universe's expansion
rate](https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Webb/Webb_Hubble_confirm_Universe_s_expansion_rate)**:

The James Webb Space Telescope has confirmed that Hubble Space
Telescope\'s measurements of the Universe\'s expansion rate are
accurate, erasing any doubt about Hubble\'s observations. The Hubble and
Webb telescopes have provided definitive measurements furthering the
case that there may be something else influencing the expansion rate
besides measurement errors. This ongoing mystery is known as the
\"Hubble Tension\" and could require new physics to resolve it.

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**[gh-116167: Allow disabling the GIL with \`PYTHON_GIL=0\` or \`-X
gil=0\` by swtaarrs · Pull Request #116338 ·
python/cpython](https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/116338)**:

This article discusses the implementation of a mechanism to disable the
GIL (Global Interpreter Lock) using PYTHON_GIL=0 or -X gil=0 environment
variables in free-threaded builds of Python, allowing for better
performance and resource management in certain use cases. The feature is
now merged into Python\'s main branch, but additional work may be needed
to re-enable the GIL when loading an incompatible extension or by
default if necessary.

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**[Are We Watching The Internet
Die?](https://www.wheresyoured.at/are-we-watching-the-internet-die/)**:

Reddit is going public at a valuation of \$6.5bn, with select Redditors
offered the chance to buy stock at the initial listing price, expected
to be in the range of \$31-34 per share. Despite its financial struggles
and potential for shares to fall below the IPO price, Reddit\'s S1
claims that advertising on the site is rapidly evolving and still in the
early phases of growth. The article highlights various issues with
generative AI models, such as their dependence on constant training
data, the risk of legal plagiarism, and potential harm to content
creators. These issues may lead to a future where the internet is
dominated by a few centralized platforms that control and monetize
user-generated content.

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**[Brits left baffled by Brexit's 'not for EU' food
labels](https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-brexit-not-for-eu-food-label/)**:

The British government has introduced new labels for meat and some dairy
products sold between Great Britain and Northern Ireland to ensure goods
aren\'t moved into the Republic of Ireland, an EU member country. From
October 2024, all meat and dairy products across the UK will also have
to carry these labels, ensuring food sold in Great Britain can be sold
in Northern Ireland. The requirement will apply to more products from
July 2025. However, shoppers are confused by these labels as they do not
denote a reduction in standards. Food policy experts argue that the
labels could lead to additional regulatory burdens and costs for the
industry, ultimately increasing costs and reducing consumer choice.

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**[El misterio de la Pila de Bagdad: la vasija de hace 2.000 años que
funcionaba como batería y cuyo origen
desconocemos](https://stigmatisnews.wordpress.com/2024/03/11/el-misterio-de-la-pila-de-bagdad-la-vasija-de-hace-2-000-anos-que-funcionaba-como-bateria-y-cuyo-origen-desconocemos/)**:

In 1936, an operation by the Iraqi State Railways Department unearthed a
tomb containing numerous antiques dating from 248 BC to 225 AD. Among
these was a peculiar pottery jar that Wilhelm Köning, a German
archaeologist responsible for Baghdad\'s Antiquities Administration,
concluded was an ancient battery capable of generating electricity. Due
to corrosion traces on the metallic materials, Köning suggested that a
calcium-based electrolyte or similar acid could be used to galvanize
objects. To prove his theory, he connected the jar to a lamp and managed
to produce a weak glow. The battery was not a single artifact but part
of a larger series of jars containing copper cylinders, iron bars, and
clay lids.

The process was rudimentary galvanization using the properties of
electrolysis with the copper cavity. Köning claimed that these ancient
batteries could create gold objects by depositing them on other metals
to protect the metal beneath from oxidation. However, there are
inconsistencies and controversy surrounding this theory, as some experts
believe it is unlikely that such a process would have been carried out
without any documented evidence or photographs.

Another theory suggests that these ancient jars could have been used in
ritualistic practices to create electrical tricks in temples. Other
theories state that the jars were roller pots containing sacred text
rolls protected by copper cylinders. The lack of terminals and the need
for constant electrolyte change make it difficult to use the jar as a
battery. The mystery surrounding the Baghdad Battery remains unsolved,
with some experts arguing that it may have been stolen during the Iraq
invasion in 2003.

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**[The Tale of the Mad Stone, the One-Time \'Cure\' for
Rabies](https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/mad-stones-rabies-cure-eerie-feeling)**:

The article tells a story of Adam Rarely, a farmer who was bitten by a
rabid dog in 1923. He sought help from Reverend William Newton Sutton,
who claimed to possess a mad stone that could cure rabies. The stone had
been in the family for generations and was believed to have healing
powers. Despite skepticism, Sutton used the stone on Rarely\'s wound
according to an ancient ritual involving milk, green scum, and waiting.
After several tries, the mad stone fell away, indicating that Rarely was
cured of rabies. Before vaccines were invented in 1884, treatments for
rabies included cauterization and the use of mad stones. Mad stones were
believed to have come from animals such as deer or elk but were often
just mineral formations that resembled an animal\'s organ. The belief in
their efficacy was strong enough that they persisted until vaccines
became widely available, although there is little evidence to support
the idea that mad stones ever worked.

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