23
submitted 1 week ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Bancos centrais e sistemas de pagamento europeus dependem de serviços prestados por empresas dos EUA

O governo holandês está alarmado com a controversa decisão da Microsoft de bloquear a conta de e-mail de Karim Khan, procurador-chefe do Tribunal Penal Internacional (TPI), sediado em Haia. Em resposta, as autoridades começaram a reavaliar a infraestrutura digital oficial e a explorar alternativas aos provedores de tecnologia dos EUA.

De acordo com o jornal holandês De Volkskrant, a suspensão da Microsoft ocorreu após sanções estadunidenses impostas pelo presidente Donald Trump em fevereiro, depois de o TPI emitir um mandado de prisão contra o primeiro-ministro israelense Benjamin Netanyahu. Como empresa dos EUA, a Microsoft cumpriu a política federal, efetivamente bloqueando o acesso de Khan às comunicações oficiais.

“Isso levantou suspeitas em todos os níveis do governo. Avaliações urgentes de nossa exposição digital estão em andamento”, disse um alto funcionário público, falando anonimamente ao De Volkskrant, observando que o incidente levou a reavaliações urgentes dentro do governo holandês.

Klaas Knot, presidente do banco central holandês (De Nederlandsche Bank, DNB), alertou nesta terça-feira que os principais sistemas nacionais dependem de tecnologias controladas no exterior. Mesmo instituições que parecem locais frequentemente dependem da infraestrutura básica de empresas estadunidenses, explicou ele, citando o iDEAL, o sistema de pagamento holandês, que depende de duas empresas dos Estados Unidos que representam mais de 60% do mercado europeu.

Knot também levantou preocupações sobre o setor de serviços em nuvem, observando que bancos, empresas e agências governamentais holandesas – incluindo o próprio DNB – armazenam dados confidenciais com provedores como Amazon, Google e Microsoft.

Busca por empresas locais

Em resposta, a demanda por provedores de nuvem nacionais aumentou. Ludo Baauw, fundador e CEO do Intermax Group, uma empresa de serviços em nuvem sediada em Roterdã, afirmou que pelo menos 10 instituições públicas importantes entraram em contato com sua empresa nas últimas semanas em busca de alternativas para reduzir sua dependência de plataformas americanas.

Baauw afirmou que a migração da infraestrutura da Microsoft pode levar de seis meses a três anos, dependendo da complexidade do projeto. Diversos departamentos governamentais estão profundamente inseridos no sistema da Microsoft, explicou ele, acrescentando que até mesmo as práticas de contratação tendem a favorecer candidatos com experiência em Microsoft, criando uma dependência de caminho difícil de reverter.

A Intermax agora está ajudando algumas instituições a armazenar backups de e-mail dentro das fronteiras holandesas para se proteger contra possíveis interrupções nos serviços da Microsoft, como interrupções no Microsoft 365, informou o De Volkskrant.

Agência Xinhua

[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

A while back I played around with chatGPT trying to write random dystopic stories. Every other plot it inserted "a group of plucky individuals and intelligence officers" to save the day. The CIA is your friend.

But seriously, deepseek and chatGPT are at best a lossy compression of the text distribution used to train it. It will necessarily mode collapse on westoid Anglo thrash when writing in English. As another user put it, "why would I want to read your LLM 10000 word story if I can just ask another LLM to summarize it back to the 30 word prompt?"

[-] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

Banir o Twitter foi centrismo e conciliação, tem que banir a Google e a Mêta e também a Microsoft.

60
submitted 1 week ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
12
submitted 2 weeks ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Suggested Post-Surrender Program for Germany

1. Demilitarization of Germany.

It should be the aim of the Allied Forces to accomplish the complete demilitarization of Germany in the shortest possible period of time after surrender. This means completely disarming the German Army and people (including the removal or destruction of all war material), the total destruction of the whole German armament industry, and the removal or destruction of other key industries which are basic to military strength.

2. Partitioning of Germany.

(a) Poland should get that part of East Prussia which doesn't go to the U.S.S.R. and the southern portion of Silesia as indicated on the attached map, (Appendix A).

(b) France should get the Saar and the adjacent territories bounded by the Rhine and the Moselle Rivers.

(c) As indicated in part 3 an International Zone should be created containing the Ruhr and the surrounding industrial areas.

(d) The remaining portion of Germany should be divided into two autonomous, independent states, (1) a South German state comprising Bavaria, Wuerttemberg, Baden and some smaller areas and (2) a North German state comprising a large part of the old state of Prussia, Saxony, Thuringia and several smaller states.

There shall be a custom union between the new South German state and Austria, which will be restored to her pre-1938 political borders.

3. The Ruhr Area.

(The Ruhr, surrounding industrial areas, as shown on the attached map, including the Rhineland, the Keil Canal, and all German territory north of the Keil Canal.)

Here lies the heart of German industrial power, the cauldron o fwars. This area should not only be stripped of all presently existing industries but so weakened and controlled that it can not in the foreseeable future become an industrial area. The following steps will accomplish this:

(a) Within a short period, if possible not longer than 6 months after the cessation of hostilities, all industrial plants and equipment not destroyed by military action shall either be completely dismantled and removed from the area or completely destroyed. All equipment shall be removed from the mines and the mines shall be throughly wrecked.

It is anticipated that the stripping of this area would be accomplished in three stages:

(i) The military forces immediately upon entry into the area shall destroy all plants and equipment which cannot be removed.

(ii) Removal of plants and equipment by members of the United Nations as restitution and reparation (Paragraph 4).

(iii) All plants and equipment not removed within a stated period of time, say 6 months, will be completely destroyed or reduced to scrap and allocated to the United Nations.

(b) All people within the area should be made to understand that this area will not again be allowed to become an industrial area. Accordingly, all people and their families within the area having special skills or technical training should be encouraged to migrate permanently from the area and should be as widely dispersed as possible.

(c) The area should be made an international zone to be governed by an international security organization to be established by the United Nations. In governing the area the international organization should be guided by policies designed to further the above stated objectives.

4. Restitution and Reparation.

Reparations, in the form of recurrent payments and deliveries, should not be demanded. Restitution and reparation shall be effected by the transfer of existing German resources and territories, e.g,

(a) by restitution of property looted by the Germans in territories occupied by them;

(b) by transfer of German territory and German private rights in industrial property situated in such territory to invaded countries and the international organization under the program of partition;

(c) by the removal and distribution among devastated countries of industrial plants and equipment situated within the International Zone and the North and South German states delimited in the section on partition;

(d) by forced German labor outside Germany; and

(e) by confiscation of all German assets of any character whatsoever outside of Germany.

5. Education and Propoganda.

(a) All schools and universities will be closed until an Allied Commission of Education has formulated an effective reorginization program. It is contemplated that it may require a considerable period of time before any institutions of higher education are reopened. Meanwhile the education of German students in foreign universities will not be prohibited. Elementary schools will be reopened as quickly as appropriate teachers and textbooks are available.

(b) All German radio stations and newspapers, magazines, weeklies, etc. shall be discontinued until adequate controls are established and an appropriate program formulated.

6. Political Decentralization.

The military administration in Germany in the initial period should be carried out with a view toward the eventual partitioning of Germany into three states. To facilitate partitioning and to assure its permanence the military authorities should be guided by the following principles:

(a) Dismiss all policy-making officials of the Reich government and deal primarily with local governments.

(b) Encourage the reestablishment of state governments in each of the states (Lander) corresponding to 18 states into which Germany is presently divided and in addition make the Prussian provinces seperate states.

(c) Upon the partition of Germany, the various state governments should be encouraged to organize a federal government for each of the newly partitioned areas. Such new governments should be in the form of a confederation of states, with emphasis on states' rights and a large degree of local automony.

7. Responsibility of Military for Local German Economy.

The sole purpose of the military in control of the German economy shall be to facilitate military operations and military occupation. The Allied Military Government shall not assume responsibility for such economic problems as price controls, rationing, unemployment, production, reconstruction, distribution, consumption, housing, or transportation, or take any measures designed to maintain or strengthen operations. The responsibility for sustaining the German economy and people rests with the German people with such facilities as may be available under the circumstances.

8. Controls over Development of German Economy.

During a period of at least twenty years after surrender adequate controls, including controls over foreign trade and tight restrictions on capital imports, shall be maintained by the United Nations designed to prevent in the newly-established states the establishment or expansion of key industries basic to the German military potential and to control other key industries.

9. Punishment of War Crimes and Treatment of Special Groups.

There is attached (Appendix B) a program for the punishment of certain war crimes and for the treatment of Nazi organizations and other special groups.

10. Wearing of Insignia and Uniforms.

(a) No person in German (except members of the United Nations and neutral countries) shall be permitted to wear any military insignia of rank or branch of service, service ribbons or military medals.

(b) No such persons shall be permitted to wear, after 6 months from the cessation of hostilities any military uniform or any uniform of any quasi military organizations.

11. Prohibition on Parades.

No military parades shall be permitted anywhere in German and all military bands shall be disbanded.

12. Aircraft.

All aircraft (including gliders), whether military or commercial, will be confiscated for later disposition. No German shall be permitted to operate or to help operate such aircraft, including those owned by foreign interests.

13. United States Responsibility.

(a) The responsibility of for the execution of the post-surrender program for Germany set forth in this memorandum is the joint responsibility of the United Nations. The execution of the joint policy agreed upon shall therefore eventually be entrusted to the international body which emerges from United Nations discussions.

Consideration of the specific measures to be taken in carrying out the joint program suggests the desirability of separating the task to be performed during the initial period of military occupation from those which will require a much longer period of execution. While the U.S., U.K., and U.S.S.R. will, for practical reasons, play the major role (of course aided by the miltary forces of the United Nations) in demilitarizing Germany (point 1) the detailed execution of other parts of the program can best be handled by Germany's continental neighbors.

(b) When Germany has been completely demilitarized there would be the following distribution of duties in carrying out the German program:

(i) The U.S. would have military and civilian representation on whatever international commission or commissions may be established for the execution of the whole German program and such representatives should have adequate U.S. staffs.

(ii) The primary responsibility for the policing of Germany and for Civil administration in Germany would be assumed by the military forces of Germany's continental neighbors. Specifically, these should include Russian, French, Polish, Cech, Greek, Yugoslav, Norwegian, Dutch and Belgian soldiers.

(c) Under this program United States troops could be withdrawn within a relatively short time. Actual withdrawal of United States troops should not precede agreement with the U.S.S.R. and the U.K. on the principles set forth in this memorandum.

14. Appointment of an American High Commissioner

An American High Commissioner for Germany should be appointed as soon as possible, so that he can sit in on the development of the American views on this problem.

APPENDIX B

Punishment of Certain War Crimes and Treatment of Special Groups.

A. Punishment of Certain War Crimes.

(1) Arch-Criminals.

A List of the Arch Criminals of this war whose obvious guilt has generally been recognized by the United Nations shall be drawn up as soon as possible and transmitted to the appropriate military authorities. The military authorities shall be instructed with respect to all persons who are on such lists as follows:

(a) They shall be apprehended as soon as possible and identified as soon as possible after apprehension, the identification to be approved by an officer of the General rank.

(b) When such identification has been made the person identified shall be put to death forthwith by firing squads made up of soldiers of the United Nations.

(2) Certain Other War Criminals.

(a) Military commissions shall be established by the Allied Military Government for the trial of certain crimes which have been committed against civilization during this war. As soon as practicable, representatives of the liberated countries of Europe shall be included on such commissions. These crimes shall include those crimes covered by the following section and such other crimes as such military commissions may be ordered to try from time to time.

(b) Any person who is suspected of being responsible for (through the issuance of orders or otherwise), or having participated in, causing the death of any human being in the following situations shall be arrested and tried promptly by such military commissions, unless prior to trial one of the United Nations has requested that such person be placed in its custody for trial on similar charges for acts committed within its territory:

(i) The death was caused by action in violation of the rules of war.

(ii) The victim was killed as a hostage in reprisal for the deeds of other persons.

(iii) The victim met death because of his nationality, race, color, creed, or political conviction.

(b) Any person who is convicted by the military commissions of the crimes specified in paragraph (c) shall be sentenced to death, unless the military commissions, in exceptional cases, determine that there are extenuating circumstances, in which case other punishment may be meted out, including deportation to a penal colony outside of Germany. Upon conviction, the sentence shall be carried out immediately.

B. Detention of Certain Groups.

All members of the following groups should be detained until the extent of the guilt of each individual is determined:

(a) The S.S.

(b) The Gestapo.

(c) All high officials of the police, S.A., and other security organizations.

(d) All high Government and Nazi Party officials.

(e) All leading public figures closely identified with Nazisim.

C. Registration of Males.

An appropriate program will be formulated for the re-registration as soon as possible of all males of the age of 14 or over. The registration shall be on a form and in a manner to be prescribed by the military authorities and shall show, among other things, whether or not the person registration is a member of the Nazi Party or affiliated organizations, the Gestapo, S.S., S.A., or Kraft Korps.

D. Labor Battalions.

Apart from the question of established guilt for special crimes, mere membership in the S.S., the Gestapo and similar groups will constitue the basis for inclusion into compulsory labor battalion to serve outside Germany for reconstruction purposes.

E. Dissolution of Nazi Organizations.

The Nazi Party and all affiliated organizations such as the Labor Front, The Hitler Youth, The Strength-through-Joy, etc., should be dissolved and their properties and records confiscated. Every possible effort should be made to prevent any attempts to reconstitute them in underground or disguised form.

F. Prohibition on Exercise of Certain Privileges.

All members of the following groups should be dismissed from public office, disenfranchised and disqualified to hold any public office or to engage in journalist, teaching, and legal professions, or, in any managerial capacity in banking, manufacturing or trade:

(1) The Nazi Party.

(2) Nazi sympathizers who by their words or deeds materially aided or abetted the Nazi program.

(3) The Junkers.

(4) Military and Naval officers.

G. Junker Estates.

All Junker estates should be broken up and divided among the peasants and the system of primogeniture and entail should be abolished.

H. Prohibition on Emigration.

(1) A Proclamation shall be issued prohibiting any person resident in Germany from leaving or attempting to leave Germany, except with permission from the Allied Military Government.

(2) Violation of this Proclamation shall be an offense triable by military commissions of the Allied Military Government and heavy penalties shall be prescribed, including death.

(3) All possible steps shall be taken by the military authorities to prevent any such person from leaving (without permission).

Henry Morgenthau

Transcription mirror

11
submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Suggested Post-Surrender Program for Germany

1. Demilitarization of Germany.

It should be the aim of the Allied Forces to accomplish the complete demilitarization of Germany in the shortest possible period of time after surrender. This means completely disarming the German Army and people (including the removal or destruction of all war material), the total destruction of the whole German armament industry, and the removal or destruction of other key industries which are basic to military strength.

2. Partitioning of Germany.

(a) Poland should get that part of East Prussia which doesn't go to the U.S.S.R. and the southern portion of Silesia as indicated on the attached map, (Appendix A).

(b) France should get the Saar and the adjacent territories bounded by the Rhine and the Moselle Rivers.

(c) As indicated in part 3 an International Zone should be created containing the Ruhr and the surrounding industrial areas.

(d) The remaining portion of Germany should be divided into two autonomous, independent states, (1) a South German state comprising Bavaria, Wuerttemberg, Baden and some smaller areas and (2) a North German state comprising a large part of the old state of Prussia, Saxony, Thuringia and several smaller states.

There shall be a custom union between the new South German state and Austria, which will be restored to her pre-1938 political borders.

3. The Ruhr Area.

(The Ruhr, surrounding industrial areas, as shown on the attached map, including the Rhineland, the Keil Canal, and all German territory north of the Keil Canal.)

Here lies the heart of German industrial power, the cauldron o fwars. This area should not only be stripped of all presently existing industries but so weakened and controlled that it can not in the foreseeable future become an industrial area. The following steps will accomplish this:

(a) Within a short period, if possible not longer than 6 months after the cessation of hostilities, all industrial plants and equipment not destroyed by military action shall either be completely dismantled and removed from the area or completely destroyed. All equipment shall be removed from the mines and the mines shall be throughly wrecked.

It is anticipated that the stripping of this area would be accomplished in three stages:

(i) The military forces immediately upon entry into the area shall destroy all plants and equipment which cannot be removed.

(ii) Removal of plants and equipment by members of the United Nations as restitution and reparation (Paragraph 4).

(iii) All plants and equipment not removed within a stated period of time, say 6 months, will be completely destroyed or reduced to scrap and allocated to the United Nations.

(b) All people within the area should be made to understand that this area will not again be allowed to become an industrial area. Accordingly, all people and their families within the area having special skills or technical training should be encouraged to migrate permanently from the area and should be as widely dispersed as possible.

(c) The area should be made an international zone to be governed by an international security organization to be established by the United Nations. In governing the area the international organization should be guided by policies designed to further the above stated objectives.

4. Restitution and Reparation.

Reparations, in the form of recurrent payments and deliveries, should not be demanded. Restitution and reparation shall be effected by the transfer of existing German resources and territories, e.g,

(a) by restitution of property looted by the Germans in territories occupied by them;

(b) by transfer of German territory and German private rights in industrial property situated in such territory to invaded countries and the international organization under the program of partition;

(c) by the removal and distribution among devastated countries of industrial plants and equipment situated within the International Zone and the North and South German states delimited in the section on partition;

(d) by forced German labor outside Germany; and

(e) by confiscation of all German assets of any character whatsoever outside of Germany.

5. Education and Propoganda.

(a) All schools and universities will be closed until an Allied Commission of Education has formulated an effective reorginization program. It is contemplated that it may require a considerable period of time before any institutions of higher education are reopened. Meanwhile the education of German students in foreign universities will not be prohibited. Elementary schools will be reopened as quickly as appropriate teachers and textbooks are available.

(b) All German radio stations and newspapers, magazines, weeklies, etc. shall be discontinued until adequate controls are established and an appropriate program formulated.

6. Political Decentralization.

The military administration in Germany in the initial period should be carried out with a view toward the eventual partitioning of Germany into three states. To facilitate partitioning and to assure its permanence the military authorities should be guided by the following principles:

(a) Dismiss all policy-making officials of the Reich government and deal primarily with local governments.

(b) Encourage the reestablishment of state governments in each of the states (Lander) corresponding to 18 states into which Germany is presently divided and in addition make the Prussian provinces seperate states.

(c) Upon the partition of Germany, the various state governments should be encouraged to organize a federal government for each of the newly partitioned areas. Such new governments should be in the form of a confederation of states, with emphasis on states' rights and a large degree of local automony.

7. Responsibility of Military for Local German Economy.

The sole purpose of the military in control of the German economy shall be to facilitate military operations and military occupation. The Allied Military Government shall not assume responsibility for such economic problems as price controls, rationing, unemployment, production, reconstruction, distribution, consumption, housing, or transportation, or take any measures designed to maintain or strengthen operations. The responsibility for sustaining the German economy and people rests with the German people with such facilities as may be available under the circumstances.

8. Controls over Development of German Economy.

During a period of at least twenty years after surrender adequate controls, including controls over foreign trade and tight restrictions on capital imports, shall be maintained by the United Nations designed to prevent in the newly-established states the establishment or expansion of key industries basic to the German military potential and to control other key industries.

9. Punishment of War Crimes and Treatment of Special Groups.

There is attached (Appendix B) a program for the punishment of certain war crimes and for the treatment of Nazi organizations and other special groups.

10. Wearing of Insignia and Uniforms.

(a) No person in German (except members of the United Nations and neutral countries) shall be permitted to wear any military insignia of rank or branch of service, service ribbons or military medals.

(b) No such persons shall be permitted to wear, after 6 months from the cessation of hostilities any military uniform or any uniform of any quasi military organizations.

11. Prohibition on Parades.

No military parades shall be permitted anywhere in German and all military bands shall be disbanded.

12. Aircraft.

All aircraft (including gliders), whether military or commercial, will be confiscated for later disposition. No German shall be permitted to operate or to help operate such aircraft, including those owned by foreign interests.

13. United States Responsibility.

(a) The responsibility of for the execution of the post-surrender program for Germany set forth in this memorandum is the joint responsibility of the United Nations. The execution of the joint policy agreed upon shall therefore eventually be entrusted to the international body which emerges from United Nations discussions.

Consideration of the specific measures to be taken in carrying out the joint program suggests the desirability of separating the task to be performed during the initial period of military occupation from those which will require a much longer period of execution. While the U.S., U.K., and U.S.S.R. will, for practical reasons, play the major role (of course aided by the miltary forces of the United Nations) in demilitarizing Germany (point 1) the detailed execution of other parts of the program can best be handled by Germany's continental neighbors.

(b) When Germany has been completely demilitarized there would be the following distribution of duties in carrying out the German program:

(i) The U.S. would have military and civilian representation on whatever international commission or commissions may be established for the execution of the whole German program and such representatives should have adequate U.S. staffs.

(ii) The primary responsibility for the policing of Germany and for Civil administration in Germany would be assumed by the military forces of Germany's continental neighbors. Specifically, these should include Russian, French, Polish, Cech, Greek, Yugoslav, Norwegian, Dutch and Belgian soldiers.

(c) Under this program United States troops could be withdrawn within a relatively short time. Actual withdrawal of United States troops should not precede agreement with the U.S.S.R. and the U.K. on the principles set forth in this memorandum.

14. Appointment of an American High Commissioner

An American High Commissioner for Germany should be appointed as soon as possible, so that he can sit in on the development of the American views on this problem.

APPENDIX B

Punishment of Certain War Crimes and Treatment of Special Groups.

A. Punishment of Certain War Crimes.

(1) Arch-Criminals.

A List of the Arch Criminals of this war whose obvious guilt has generally been recognized by the United Nations shall be drawn up as soon as possible and transmitted to the appropriate military authorities. The military authorities shall be instructed with respect to all persons who are on such lists as follows:

(a) They shall be apprehended as soon as possible and identified as soon as possible after apprehension, the identification to be approved by an officer of the General rank.

(b) When such identification has been made the person identified shall be put to death forthwith by firing squads made up of soldiers of the United Nations.

(2) Certain Other War Criminals.

(a) Military commissions shall be established by the Allied Military Government for the trial of certain crimes which have been committed against civilization during this war. As soon as practicable, representatives of the liberated countries of Europe shall be included on such commissions. These crimes shall include those crimes covered by the following section and such other crimes as such military commissions may be ordered to try from time to time.

(b) Any person who is suspected of being responsible for (through the issuance of orders or otherwise), or having participated in, causing the death of any human being in the following situations shall be arrested and tried promptly by such military commissions, unless prior to trial one of the United Nations has requested that such person be placed in its custody for trial on similar charges for acts committed within its territory:

(i) The death was caused by action in violation of the rules of war.

(ii) The victim was killed as a hostage in reprisal for the deeds of other persons.

(iii) The victim met death because of his nationality, race, color, creed, or political conviction.

(b) Any person who is convicted by the military commissions of the crimes specified in paragraph (c) shall be sentenced to death, unless the military commissions, in exceptional cases, determine that there are extenuating circumstances, in which case other punishment may be meted out, including deportation to a penal colony outside of Germany. Upon conviction, the sentence shall be carried out immediately.

B. Detention of Certain Groups.

All members of the following groups should be detained until the extent of the guilt of each individual is determined:

(a) The S.S.

(b) The Gestapo.

(c) All high officials of the police, S.A., and other security organizations.

(d) All high Government and Nazi Party officials.

(e) All leading public figures closely identified with Nazisim.

C. Registration of Males.

An appropriate program will be formulated for the re-registration as soon as possible of all males of the age of 14 or over. The registration shall be on a form and in a manner to be prescribed by the military authorities and shall show, among other things, whether or not the person registration is a member of the Nazi Party or affiliated organizations, the Gestapo, S.S., S.A., or Kraft Korps.

D. Labor Battalions.

Apart from the question of established guilt for special crimes, mere membership in the S.S., the Gestapo and similar groups will constitue the basis for inclusion into compulsory labor battalion to serve outside Germany for reconstruction purposes.

E. Dissolution of Nazi Organizations.

The Nazi Party and all affiliated organizations such as the Labor Front, The Hitler Youth, The Strength-through-Joy, etc., should be dissolved and their properties and records confiscated. Every possible effort should be made to prevent any attempts to reconstitute them in underground or disguised form.

F. Prohibition on Exercise of Certain Privileges.

All members of the following groups should be dismissed from public office, disenfranchised and disqualified to hold any public office or to engage in journalist, teaching, and legal professions, or, in any managerial capacity in banking, manufacturing or trade:

(1) The Nazi Party.

(2) Nazi sympathizers who by their words or deeds materially aided or abetted the Nazi program.

(3) The Junkers.

(4) Military and Naval officers.

G. Junker Estates.

All Junker estates should be broken up and divided among the peasants and the system of primogeniture and entail should be abolished.

H. Prohibition on Emigration.

(1) A Proclamation shall be issued prohibiting any person resident in Germany from leaving or attempting to leave Germany, except with permission from the Allied Military Government.

(2) Violation of this Proclamation shall be an offense triable by military commissions of the Allied Military Government and heavy penalties shall be prescribed, including death.

(3) All possible steps shall be taken by the military authorities to prevent any such person from leaving (without permission).

Henry Morgenthau

Transcript mirror

[-] [email protected] 6 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Claramente não confio nesse "a lei proíbe", "obedecendo ordens", mas me parece um momento interessante pra se observar do fediverse. O próprio lemmy divulgava em seu site que sistemas federados eram "resistentes a censura", e dá pra ver isso na prática quando uma lei na Alemanha, ao invés de impactar todos os usuários, impacta apenas um servidor que é fortemente rechaçado no resto das redes.

Os usuários desse servidor podem facilmente pegar seus dados e se mudarem para instâncias que não protegem o regime genocida sionista de "israel", e que não são regidas pelas leis coloniais da Alemanha.

Um problema mais interessante e difícil de prever, é se uma instância hospedada na Alemanha poderia ainda assim ter problemas legais por conteúdo de outros servidores hospedado em cache e acessível através do feddit.org. Ou até caso a repressão se torne ainda mais violenta e o BMI demandar que, por exemplo, o DNS de sites estrangeiros seja bloqueado na Alemanha efetivamente isolando servidores locais da Grande Rede Federada.

Obviamente eu apoiaria bloquear qualquer servidor que bane conteúdo anti-genocídio, mas até pra própria sobrevivência do servidor deles eu acho que eles que terão que bloquear as outras instâncias.

É um momento bom para observar se como o fediverse lida com política e repressão na prática.

Edit: fizeram um segundo post

7
submitted 3 weeks ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Sim.

9
submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

O programa espião ["israelense"] foi usado para monitorar mais de 1 mil indivíduos de dezenas de países em 2019.

8
submitted 3 weeks ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
[-] [email protected] 4 points 3 weeks ago

E finalmente tá no F-droid. Glória!

[-] [email protected] 5 points 3 weeks ago

Nem é que eu não consegui gerar lucro não, é que a gente decidiu não gerar lucro mesmo.

8
submitted 3 weeks ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
38
submitted 4 weeks ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
8
submitted 4 weeks ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
6
submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
8
CryptoRave 2025 (2025.cryptorave.org)
submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

A CryptoRave é um evento anual que reúne, em 24 horas (+ festa a ser divulgada), diversas atividades sobre segurança, criptografia, hacking, anonimato, privacidade e liberdade na rede

A CryptoRave é aberta e gratuita e realizada na cidade de São Paulo, as inscrições serão feitas no local.

Inspirada em uma ação global, descentralizada para disseminar e democratizar o conhecimento e conceitos básicos de criptografia e software livre, o evento teve início em 2014, como reação à divulgação de informações que confirmaram a ação de governos e corporações para manter a população mundial sob vigilância e monitoramento constante. Junte-se a nós!

A programação parece muito boa!

[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

Pô, botaram um tanto de capital mas não colocaram Belo Horizonte. Deixo aqui nossa humilde contribuição. Foi um ótimo ato.

No 1º de maio, trabalhadores de MG protestam pelo fim da escala 6×1 e contra o governo Zema

[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

Bom de mais! Vou aproveitar pra postar uns textos legais que eu acho nas minhas pesquisas pro TCC.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

Esse opt-in seria a nível de instância ou de usuário? Acho que de usuário seria bem restritivo. Mas de toda forma, nada do que eu pretendo fazer necessitará a divulgação do banco de dados (eu espero). As análises serão todas feitas in-loco e agregadas preservando a privacidade de indivíduos. Mas ótimas pontuações, vou tentar conversar com meus orientadores sobre isso.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

Parece uma boa solução. Vou ter que estudar as APIs do lemmy e do masto, mas acho que é melhor isso do que sobrecarregar o server tendo que renderizar o front-end.

P.S. já tentei rodar um server de lemmy e o backend é eficiente pra caramba. O futuro é Rust.

[-] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

De forma alguma é pra treinar IA, tenho ódio dessas porra. É pra fazer um estudo sobre dinâmicas sociais no Fediverse e como podem ser diferentes de dinâmicas em redes centralizadas.

[-] [email protected] 4 points 4 months ago

Haddadismo.

China lidera em energia renovável, principalmente se considerado em proporção à escala de produção. O Brasil praticamente não tem indústria ou setor secundário, os seus produtos provavelmente são importados, seja do Paraguai, seja do Vietnam ou Malásia. As condições de trabalho na China serem piores que as de qualquer fonte alternativa do mesmo produto é uma afirmação que carece de fontes.

Estadunidenses caírem nessa até faz sentido, mas Brasileiro tem que tá bem colonizado culturalmente.

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r2castro

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