solo

joined 6 months ago
MODERATOR OF
 

A network of accounts on X using stolen and possibly AI-generated images coordinated to engage with accounts supportive of Israel

This discovery follows previous research by the DFRLab and other investigators which exposed a similar network of inauthentic pro-Israel accounts which became active on Facebook, Instagram, and X after the beginning of the war in Gaza.

10
submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by solo to c/climate
 

Talks take place in Azerbaijan amid an escalating crackdown on dissent.

Between 40,000 and 50,000 delegates are expected to attend COP29. This will include government representatives from all UN member states, as well as the State of Palestine, the Holy See, Niue, the Cook Islands, and the European Union. All of these are parties to the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), and most have also joined the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement. COP29 will also host diplomats, UN officials, journalists, climate scientists, trade union leaders, and policy experts. NGOs, activists, and Indigenous leaders are also planning to participate – although the involvement of independent media workers and human rights defenders from Azerbaijan itself has been curbed by an ongoing government crackdown.

Like previous climate summits, COP29 will host many participants whose agendas are seriously at odds with climate justice. Thousands of fossil fuel lobbyists, along with the heads of oil giants like Shell and BP, are expected to be in attendance. These participants have used previous summits to advance their own interests, opposing essential efforts to phase out fossil fuels and pushing for false solutions like carbon offsetting. Amnesty International is calling for a robust conflict of interest policy to prevent fossil fuel lobbyists undermining the aims of global climate treaties.

  1. What is Amnesty calling for at COP29?
  • Human rights must be at the heart of all climate action decision-making;
  • States in a position to do so must massively scale up climate finance and funding for loss and damage; All states must commit to fully phasing out fossil fuels, in a way that is fast and fair;
  • COP29 participants must not chase risky technologies, like carbon capture and storage and removals, or push gas as a “transition fuel”, as a means of distracting from the urgent need to phase out fossil fuels;
  • The UNFCCC Secretariat, the government of Azerbaijan, and other governments must protect civic space, and guarantee the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly.
 

Troops revel in the destruction they have caused in southern towns and villages, joking about a blown-up mosque and torched hospital

Legal experts have previously warned that videos posted by Israeli soldiers could breach international law, and an Al Jazeera documentary revealed that their TikToks could amount to war crimes.

 

A French court has sentenced a nursing student to three years in prison for allegedly “glorifying terrorism” on social media.

Zaiter said “46 days after an arbitrary and unjust detention for having denounced the genocide and expressed my support for Palestine in Nice, I finally find my daughter.”

The trial highlights France’s stringent stance on public speech and pro-Israel laws.

 

The letter below was submitted by Transparency International EU and the undersigned organisations to European Climate Commission Wopke Hoekstra.

Subject: excluding fossil fuel lobbyists from EU delegations at UN climate talks (...)

 

“Everything,” says Angélica Choc, “depends on the vital liquid – water.” Choc is a Maya Q’eqchi’ land defender from El Estor in eastern Guatemala. For years, she and other Q’eqchi’ villagers have opposed the development of the nearby Fenix mine, a massive mountain-top nickel complex in El Estor’s Izabal Department. In early May 2024, I joined a delegation visiting several communities that are fighting against Canadian mining projects in Guatemala.

 

In our recent journal paper in Nature Geoscience, we show that a thin layer at the ocean surface called the “ocean skin”, a layer thinner than a human hair, increases this ocean CO₂ uptake by about 7%. That sounds like a small difference, but this additional uptake is equivalent to the CO₂ absorbed by the entire Amazon rainforest each year.

As the need to reduce emissions and meet reduction targets ramps up, insights about how the ocean skin works will help scientists understand how the ocean will respond to our emissions.

 

What’s new: The first ever camera trap study from Cambodia’s Central Cardamom Mountains has captured footage of 108 wildlife species, including 23 that are threatened with extinction. This survey confirms the area’s importance as a biodiversity hotspot, a recent report says.

 

A new report by the FACT Coalition found that many investigations into environmental crimes do not follow the money. Of the 230 cases analyzed, 76% involved the use of front and shell companies, likely due to flaws in the anti-money laundering systems of foreign countries, researchers said.

The environmental crimes analyzed occurred between 2014 and 2024 in Amazon countries, mainly in Colombia, Ecuador and Peru. The aim was to better understand how criminals operate and how the associated profits are laundered.

According to the report’s findings, 25% of all cases, and 44% of “follow the money” cases, involved at least one foreign jurisdiction. The U.S. was the foreign jurisdiction mentioned most across all cases analyzed, either as a transit or destination point for illegally sourced natural resources, such as gold or timber, or dirty money.

 

The upcycling method saves the carbon fibers of the CFRP, which are the strong, durable part of the material. These fibers stay in good condition, and the team showed how they can be reused in new manufacturing, keeping over 97% of their original strength. This method is the first to successfully claim value from both the matrix and carbon fiber parts of CFRPs, turning waste into useful products and reducing environmental harm.

[–] solo 12 points 3 months ago

The problem is in the system that allows these people to be in power. Even if this one is out of the picture there is a list of others waiting to take their turn.

[–] solo 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

Just edited the description to include the article, since it was such a small one.

From the little I know about mushroom hunting this is my understanding as well. I would emphasise your point in relation to foraging mushroom in relation to smell and taste

it’s not something I would recommend to a novice

I almost forgot to mention: great link!

[–] solo 4 points 3 months ago

This text is lovely and has many interesting info. Just to note an approach from personal experience that has worked well for several different collective kitchens I have participated, which is not really mentioned here, unless I missed it.

We would go to open-air markets in the morning after they set up and give a small flyer asking for food donations at the end of their shift day. Talking to them was also important, if they felt like doing so, of course. After a period of time, we would just show up just before they were closing and get a lot of food from some specific greengrocers, that were glad to help.

I have to note it was not on a daily basis, it was weekly and not for a mobile thing. Still it was food for a high double digit number of people. And every time before cooking we decided what we would cook, depending on what we had available. Also, all the equipment was donations and anyone could participate in the cooking (actually encouraged to do so since it was not charity, it was collective cooking), and there was a free contribution box for money, through which we would get things like pasta, rice, oil. there was one rule that I liked for the people eating, it was to wash their dish and utensils after their meal. If food or fresh ingredients were left, we had them available for people to take them after eating.

[–] solo 1 points 3 months ago

For some reason I had troubles viewing this link, so here's an archived version of it.

[–] solo 4 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (11 children)

That is my understanding as well and it is more of less what the article says.

It takes two to make peace.

I think in the case of the Gaza bombings of civilians (I cannot call this a war) the two parts needed for peace are the US and Israel.

[–] solo 3 points 3 months ago

Just found this relevant article that has a quite thorough account in relation to water in Gaza.

Deadly diseases ripping through Gaza after destruction of water, sewage systems

[–] solo 7 points 3 months ago

Israel has been killing hundreds of Palestinians civilians in refugee centers, schools and hospitals

Just to note that actually, it's tens of thousands by now. Even during October Israel had already killed many thousands of Palestinian civilians.

[–] solo 4 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I don't agree with this narrative of "both sides are to blame". It wrongly equates the colonizers with the colonized. In this case the Zionist settler colonialists and the colonized Palestinians. Also, in an apartheid we can't say both sides are to blame because of the power imbalance that is present.

[–] solo 5 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

Even tho I understand the intentions of this, I have to say I agree with everything, except this part

Jews are awesome

I don't think a generalisation like this can be constructive in any way. Netanyahu is not awsome, nor Smotrich, Ben-gvir neither, and they are all Jews. Jewish settler-colonialists are not awesome, and the problem is definitely not their religion. Jews are people with some religious beliefs, some are awesome, some not so much and some of them are terrible human beings.

Edit: Maybe something like that would be more accurate:

Anti-Zionist Jews are awsome

[–] solo 3 points 3 months ago

I like your clarification, totally on board with that.

[–] solo 1 points 3 months ago

Yeah, it is a nice photo, from a technical perspective I suppose. But without any meaning for me. Still, good to know!

[–] solo 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (2 children)

Pff..I'm afraid, you could be right and that's a total bummer.

Edit: Yep, unfortunately for me, it's a reflection thingy

“Using the surface of the calm water I captured the striking reflection.."

And now, I just don't like it.

view more: ‹ prev next ›