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India launches space mission to the sun a week after moon landing
www.theguardian.com India launches space mission to the sun a week after moon landing

Aditya-L1 is to observe sun’s outermost layers and will be first vessel by any Asian nation to be placed in orbit around sun

India launches space mission to the sun a week after moon landing
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India launches space mission to the sun a week after moon landing
www.theguardian.com India launches space mission to the sun a week after moon landing

Aditya-L1 is to observe sun’s outermost layers and will be first vessel by any Asian nation to be placed in orbit around sun

India launches space mission to the sun a week after moon landing
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How much data are your GPU drivers collecting about you? Quite a lot in Intel's case
  • Saw a lot of posts on this topic, but this is the first time I am learning the drivers in question are Beta drivers.

  • I only get 82% :( How much do you get?
  • Better than 3% for sure.

  • Featured
    The Great Big List of Lemmy Apps
  • It doesn't help sadly. I have tried different browsers, different apps. Same problem in all cases.

  • Featured
    The Great Big List of Lemmy Apps
  • Replying to this from notification as this comment doesn't load for me when viewed from the post.

  • Featured
    The Great Big List of Lemmy Apps
  • Most comments are not showing up in my feed. Not sure where to ask for help.

  • Google Messages signs onto cross-platform encrypted group chat standard
    www.theverge.com Google Messages signs onto cross-platform encrypted group chat standard

    Encrypted messaging between Google Messages and WhatsApp might be possible.

    Google Messages signs onto cross-platform encrypted group chat standard

    From the Article:

    Google’s Messages app might be getting cross-platform chat encryption in the future. The company is announcing adoption of an end-to-end encryption system known as Messaging Layer Security, or MLS. It’ll allow Google’s platform to connect and exchange messages with outside messaging apps that also support MLS (via 9to5Google).

    Want to message a group chat and have it securely and seamlessly appear on other people’s devices in their preferred chat apps? That’s the future European regulators are pushing for: to get tech companies to implement an end-to-end encryption system that allows users to securely message between platforms.

    Meaningful interoperability would require major companies to back the same standard, and MLS now seems to have one of the biggest ones on its side. Google also supports the carrier-backed end-to-end encrypted messaging system known as RCS. For a while, RCS didn’t have proper security for group chats, but Google is now releasing a version that does (which doesn’t use MLS).

    A big problem MLS may solve is better encryption for group messages. An Oxford paper published in 2017 pointed out security concerns in how some major messaging apps, including WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, and Google Allo (RIP), could have group messages intercepted if just one member is compromised. So researchers sketched up an “Asynchronous Ratcheting Tree” that makes end-to-end group messages even more secure, and MLS was built with that idea in mind.

    The MLS protocol is developed by a standards organization called the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). The body just approved publication of MLS specification (RFC 9420) in March and has previously tested draft versions in Webex and RingCentral chats.

    Google is moving to place its MLS implementation open sourced into Android’s codebase but did not say when this would happen. It also did not specify how or if RCS messages, which Google has outwardly championed for more than a year, will work with the MLS-based encryption. Google continues to shame Apple for not supporting RCS, which is now available to more than 800 million Android users. It remains to be seen if other tech companies will “get the message” with MLS.

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    Would You Rather Give Up Meat Or Flying For The Environment?
  • I get it. You guys are just trolling.

  • Would You Rather Give Up Meat Or Flying For The Environment?
  • If I had to go to Europe or Japan, how am I supposed to accomplish that?

  • Would You Rather Give Up Meat Or Flying For The Environment?
  • Is it even possible to give up flying?

  • Threads users decline significantly despite initial surge in sign-ups
    www.theguardian.com Threads users decline significantly despite initial surge in sign-ups

    Within a week of launch of Mark Zuckerberg’s answer to Twitter 100 million people signed up, but weeks later there’s been a drop

    Threads users decline significantly despite initial surge in sign-ups
    33
    Unpacking Google’s new “dangerous” Web-Environment-Integrity specification
    vivaldi.com Unpacking Google’s new “dangerous” Web-Environment-Integrity specification

    Why Vivaldi browser thinks Google’s new proposal, the Web-Environment-Integrity spec, is a major threat to the open web and should be pushed back.

    Unpacking Google’s new “dangerous” Web-Environment-Integrity specification
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    The internet has become soulless and i hate it
  • And I love it

  • What is your internet service plan?
  • 500 Rupees (about 6$) for 40mbps fibre connection.

  • The excellent Arc browser is now available for anyone to download
  • So that you will click on the article even though you are not using Mac and iOS.

  • Fake Video Led To Women Being Paraded Naked, Teen Brother Was Killed
    www.ndtv.com Fake Video Led To Women Being Paraded Naked, Teen Brother Was Killed

    The women paraded naked in Manipur were dragged away by a mob from police protection as ethnic violence flared up in the state early May, sources said today amid outrage and horror over a video of the incident that went viral yesterday.

    Fake Video Led To Women Being Paraded Naked, Teen Brother Was Killed
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    Johnson & Johnson must pay $18.8m to cancer patient in baby powder lawsuit
    www.theguardian.com Johnson & Johnson must pay $18.8m to cancer patient in baby powder lawsuit

    Jury rules in favor of California man who says he developed a deadly cancer from heavy exposure to talc powder since childhood

    Johnson & Johnson must pay $18.8m to cancer patient in baby powder lawsuit
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    Intel and ASUS Agree to Term Sheet to Take Intel NUC Systems Product...
    www.intel.com Intel and ASUS Agree to Term Sheet to Take Intel NUC Systems Product...

    Intel and ASUS agree to term sheet to manufacture, sell and support 10th to 13th Gen NUC systems product line and to develop future innovative NUC systems product designs.

    Intel and ASUS Agree to Term Sheet to Take Intel NUC Systems Product...
    1
    Computer memory prototype ditches 1s and 0s for denser data storage
    newatlas.com Computer memory prototype ditches 1s and 0s for denser data storage

    Cambridge scientists have developed a new prototype for computer memory that could make for faster chips that could hold up to 100 times more data. The system is made up of barium bridges between films of a disordered material.

    Computer memory prototype ditches 1s and 0s for denser data storage
    4
    AT&T and Verizon’s ancient lead cables have US lawmakers demanding action
    arstechnica.com AT&T and Verizon’s ancient lead cables have US lawmakers demanding action

    "Corporate irresponsibility": Telcos accused of failing to act on health risks.

    AT&T and Verizon’s ancient lead cables have US lawmakers demanding action

    cross-posted from: https://lemdro.id/post/104472

    > > The WSJ reported, "For many years, telecom companies have known about the lead-covered cables and the potential risks of exposure to their workers, according to documents and interviews with former employees. They were also aware that lead was potentially leaching into the environment, but haven't meaningfully acted on potential health risks to the surrounding communities or made efforts to monitor the cables." > > > The WSJ quoted former cable splicer James Winn, who worked for several Bell system companies for 45 years, as saying the companies "knew the risks, but they didn't want to do a lot to mitigate it." > "Company testing in the 1980s found that [Winn] had high levels of lead in his blood, but his manager told him to go back to working with lead shortly after, he said," the WSJ wrote. > Another WSJ article on the topic that came out today profiled former workers who have illnesses that could have been caused by lead exposure. "Some of the workers have neurological disorders, kidney ailments, gastrointestinal issues and cardiovascular problems, illnesses that can be linked to lead exposure," the WSJ wrote. "There's no way to determine what triggered specific ailments. Doctors say no amount of lead is safe." > According to the article, "AT&T dismissed 'anecdotal, non-evidence-based linkages to individuals' health symptoms,' saying those symptoms 'could be associated with a vast number of potential causes.' Verizon said it has 'a robust safety and health program to provide training, materials and resources,' and that workers can get lead testing at any time at no cost." > > > AT&T posted a statement on its website calling the WSJ's testing methodologies "flawed." The company also said it "manage[s] legacy lead-clad cables in compliance with applicable laws and regulations" and follows best practices "based on established science."

    1
    AT&T and Verizon’s ancient lead cables have US lawmakers demanding action
    arstechnica.com AT&T and Verizon’s ancient lead cables have US lawmakers demanding action

    "Corporate irresponsibility": Telcos accused of failing to act on health risks.

    AT&T and Verizon’s ancient lead cables have US lawmakers demanding action

    > The WSJ reported, "For many years, telecom companies have known about the lead-covered cables and the potential risks of exposure to their workers, according to documents and interviews with former employees. They were also aware that lead was potentially leaching into the environment, but haven't meaningfully acted on potential health risks to the surrounding communities or made efforts to monitor the cables."

    > The WSJ quoted former cable splicer James Winn, who worked for several Bell system companies for 45 years, as saying the companies "knew the risks, but they didn't want to do a lot to mitigate it." "Company testing in the 1980s found that [Winn] had high levels of lead in his blood, but his manager told him to go back to working with lead shortly after, he said," the WSJ wrote. Another WSJ article on the topic that came out today profiled former workers who have illnesses that could have been caused by lead exposure. "Some of the workers have neurological disorders, kidney ailments, gastrointestinal issues and cardiovascular problems, illnesses that can be linked to lead exposure," the WSJ wrote. "There's no way to determine what triggered specific ailments. Doctors say no amount of lead is safe." According to the article, "AT&T dismissed 'anecdotal, non-evidence-based linkages to individuals' health symptoms,' saying those symptoms 'could be associated with a vast number of potential causes.' Verizon said it has 'a robust safety and health program to provide training, materials and resources,' and that workers can get lead testing at any time at no cost."

    > AT&T posted a statement on its website calling the WSJ's testing methodologies "flawed." The company also said it "manage[s] legacy lead-clad cables in compliance with applicable laws and regulations" and follows best practices "based on established science."

    0
    Forum drama never dies. Jack Dorsey has logged on to Threads, it seems.
    www.theverge.com Forum drama never dies. - The Verge

    Jack Dorsey — he of the Radiohead posts — has logged on to Threads, it seems. Anyway, a defensive posting 101 lesson for the rest of you: never give your enemies content.

    Forum drama never dies. - The Verge
    1
    Another Samsung Galaxy S23 FE leak details the phone's diverse chipsets in different markets
    www.androidcentral.com Another Samsung Galaxy S23 FE leak details the phone's diverse chipsets in different markets

    The phone has appeared on a benchmarking site, revealing some interesting information about its processor.

    Another Samsung Galaxy S23 FE leak details the phone's diverse chipsets in different markets
    • New Geekbench listings indicate that the Galaxy S23 FE will draw its power from a Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 in the U.S. and an Exynos 2200 chipset in other markets.

    • Samsung's Exynos 2200 SoC was previously criticized for poor energy efficiency compared to its Snapdragon counterpart, but the company may have addressed this concern.

    • The phone is expected to make its debut in the third quarter of this year as a cheaper version of Samsung's latest flagship series.

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    reclipse Reclipse @lemdro.id
    Posts 45
    Comments 259