Skip Navigation
InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)AU
autumn @reddthat.com
Posts 23
Comments 131

Etching by A. Fox after Joseph Wolf, 1853

Full title: Α Fox dressed as a Monk is greeting a passing Hare Etching by A. Fox after Joseph Wolf, 1853

1
OP argues about white privilege in /r/TrueUnpopularOpinion, gets roasted
  • Most men totally support equal rights for women and treat them with total respect and would never shaft them because they're women.

    Asians are real hot too, but ive only boned one and she was kind of just something to do while in a slump she wasnt a looker (but I'd love to date one. Hot.).

    🤔

  • awaken my oranges
  • I highly recommend it!

    If you go and do the storyline, remember that you can read some of the stuff via qr code on your phone so you don't have to sit at the terminals to watch the videos.

  • Reddthat Update - September 2023
  • Thanks as always for taking the time to keep us up to date on what's going on with the server!

    I am glad you are recruiting for more admins. Regardless of whether lemmy improves their moderation tools, it's hard to substitute for an actual human being looking at stuff.

  • Three found dead at remote Rocky Mountain campsite were trying to escape society, stepsister says
  • Jara said she tried everything short of kidnapping to keep them from leaving, but nothing worked. Now, Jara wants to warn others about the risks of surviving in the wilderness.

    “I do not wish this on anybody at all,” Jara said. “I can’t wait to get to the point where I’m happy and all I can think of is the memories.”

    I feel so bad for the stepsister

  • Visual artists fight back against AI companies for repurposing their work
  • The Guild’s core proposal is this: AI-generated material can't replace a human writer. AI-generated material cannot qualify as source material for adaptation in any way. AI-generated work can be used as research material, just as a Wikipedia article could, but because of the unclear nature of the sources that go into its output and how the output is generated, it has no place as an "author" in the world of copyright. AI outputs are not, in the Guild's opinion, copyrightable.

    That means that if a studio wants to use an AI-generated script, there can be no credited author and no copyright. In a world where studios jealously guard the rights to their work, that's a major poison pill.

    I think this would be a decent compromise. It feels like the core of the AI art fight is really who can make money off of it.

  • Visual artists fight back against AI companies for repurposing their work
  • “My fear is that our industry will be diminished to such a point that very few of us can make a living,” Ortiz says, anticipating that artists will be tasked with simply editing AI-generated images, rather than creating.

    This feels very prescient. Maybe there will be laws passed to compensate artists for feeding their work to an AI, but there's no way companies will avoid using AI to do the heavy lifting.

  • Knife-Wielding Doctors Roam Country Searching For Teens To Force To Be Trans
  • According to local sources throughout the nation, once the knife-wielding doctors have successfully swapped every teen’s gender, they probably have plans to go around swapping them all back again.

    Big pharma strikes again

  • How long have you had your current water bottle?
  • I've got several ikea glass water bottles because i tend to forget where they are. They're pretty simply made (glass bottle, plastic cap, silicone ring) and therefore easy to clean.

    They've held up well for a few months now.

  • TRUTH TIME! How many of you have actually read a user manual of an operating system completely?
  • No, because documentation should be more like a dictionary than a novel - it's written to convey info quickly and accurately, not interestingly. 😆

    Next time no need to add on apologetic stuff at the end of your post. People will engage with your post or not, it's the Internet, it's fine

  • “Le Grand Cloisonné” (2017) - Marc Bourlier

    “Le Grand Cloisonné” (2017), driftwood, linen twine, and wallpaper, 120 x 90 x 5 centimeters

    1

    all these taglines...

    Tiff are you ok? These are starting to resemble a series of increasingly unhinged post it notes stuck to the wall somewhere. 💀

    5

    Recommendations for podcasts to fall asleep to?

    Something not high energy, and interesting but not too interesting lol

    Examples I've been enjoying include 99% Invisible, Ologies, and Common Descent

    50
    theintercept.com Lawsuit Targets FBI Probe of Racial Justice Activists

    The FBI’s secret infiltration of the 2020 protest movement was first revealed by The Intercept and the podcast series “Alphabet Boys.”

    Lawsuit Targets FBI Probe of Racial Justice Activists
    0
    theintercept.com Years After #MeToo, Defamation Cases Increasingly Target Victims Who Can’t Afford to Speak Out

    Sexual abuse victims without the resources to fight off defamation lawsuits may feel forced to recant their accusations or never speak up.

    1
    www.eastbaytimes.com ‘Sham and charade’: Albany Lions Club, city argue over removal of controversial cross in court

    A trial kicked off Tuesday to decide whether local officials had the right to remove the controversial steel and plexiglass cross last month.

    ‘Sham and charade’: Albany Lions Club, city argue over removal of controversial cross in court

    Full text:

    HAYWARD — While the 28-foot cross that the Lions Club erected on public land atop Albany Hill 52 years ago may seem like an obvious violation of the Constitution’s “Establishment Clause” that is widely interpreted as requiring a separation of church and state, the community service group’s lawyers have gone to court to argue that city officials failed to find a solution that preserved the Christian symbol — without ever genuinely entertaining efforts to compromise.

    A trial kicked off Tuesday to decide whether local officials had the right to remove the controversial steel and plexiglass cross last month, culminating in four hours of witness testimony and a host of legal objections at the Hayward Hall of Justice.

    Instead of justifying the cross’ removal, attorneys representing the city of Albany called no witnesses, submitted no exhibits and asked scant questions during testimonies “because it’s (the Lions Club’s) challenge.”

    Rather, Albany’s legal team asked one question to each of the three witnesses that took the stand Tuesday: did they make an effort to oppose the Albany City Council’s unanimous decision to acquire the land under the cross by eminent domain at their April 2022 meeting? No one said “yes.”

    Early on June 8, the city quietly removed the electrically illuminated cross, which the Albany Lions Club installed in 1971 on then-private land. The quiet removal was Albany’s attempt to finally allay accusations of constitutional violation, address residents’ resentment about one religion being given preference over others, and free up more space on the 1.1-acre plot of what is now public park space.

    A federal judge and the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals previously ruled that the cross violates the establishment clause of the First Amendment because governments are forbidden from promoting one religion over another, but the structure sat on an easement granted to the Lions Club to ensure its preservation.

    But at Monday’s trial, Lions Club’s attorneys Robert Nichols and Richard Covert effectively doubled down on the cross’ overt Christian symbolism and message; they argued that the cross’ perch on the hill has historically been a sacrosanct destination for church services, memorials, weddings and everyday prayer for the local Christian community, including the roughly dozen “Friends of the Cross on Albany Hill” who gathered outside of the courthouse Tuesday morning to show their support.

    Kevin Pope, president of the Albany Lions Club, and Dorena Osborn, the granddaughter of the Lions Club member who installed the cross, both testified that the cross was a “sacred location” for Christians to worship, pray and see a symbol of Jesus Christ’s death, resurrection and love.

    Nichols argued the city had an obligation not to burden religious practices like the ones on Albany Hill unless there were no other alternatives.

    Technically, Albany could have skirted constitutional problems by selling the land under the cross to the Lions Club, but Mayor Aaron Tiedemann said the decision to get rid of the Christian symbol altogether was more aligned with values of many in the current community, who have long complained that the cross symbolizes a preference of one religion over others, offends some members of the city’s diverse communities, is reminiscent of KKK cross-burnings in the East Bay hills in the 1920s, and is an eyesore.

    However, the defense submitted transcripts of past council meetings, Facebook posts and city documents into evidence that they allege show how past and present councilmembers did not facilitate any debate about the trade-offs of the controversial decision. Instead, they claim the city’s public actions regarding the cross — including requesting that PG&E shut off power to the structure — were a “sham and charade” because they simply wanted to move forward with its removal from the park, which the attorneys argued was a publicized goal since at least 2016.

    Nichols contended those preconceived notions were on display during the April 2022 meeting. While the Albany City Council had a robust discussion on the cost, style and necessity of police cars, when the vote regarding the cross came up, Tiedemann only recited a pre-written motion about the eminent domain lawsuit without any followup by his colleagues.

    The attorneys representing the city, Andrew Saghian and Scott Ditfurth, repeatedly objected to dozens of items of evidence and questions posed by the Lions Club attorneys, arguing issues of hearsay, relevance, authenticity, legislative privilege and foundation. The issues in question were all sourced from city documents, but the lawyers said the Lions Club often failed to authenticate or adequately frame the information shared in court.

    Judge Somnath Raj Chatterjee was generally split on the lawyers’ arguments, but ultimately sustained a number of the challenges. He will rule on a final list of accepted exhibits after both legal teams file briefs in the coming weeks.

    0
    www.eastbaytimes.com ‘Systems have gone down’: Emergency declared as Hayward cyberattack impedes emergency dispatch system

    The Hayward City Council declared a local emergency Thursday over an ongoing cyberattack that has disrupted city services.

    ‘Systems have gone down’: Emergency declared as Hayward cyberattack impedes emergency dispatch system

    Full text:

    HAYWARD — The Hayward City Council declared a local emergency Thursday over an ongoing cyberattack, in an effort to more quickly acquire resources to respond to what officials have described as intruders trying to hold municipal computer systems and networks hostage.

    The attack has gripped the city since it was discovered Sunday — affecting an array of services from emergency dispatching to electronic payments to library check-out systems — and left officials without an answer for when the disruption will be fully resolved.

    “We’re still trying to assess that at this point,” Hayward City Manager Kelly McAdoo told the council, adding that some services such as the city website have been restored while others remain offline. “Our priority is ensuring public safety services are restored to the extent that those need to be.”

    McAdoo said the city’s 911 dispatch center has “had to pivot the most in this emergency” while it continues to answer calls and help police officers and firefighters respond in a timely manner.

    The city manager declined to elaborate on how the center was affected, but the city’s mayor, Mark Salinas, suggested at the meeting that emergency dispatch communications had been knocked down to an “old-school” mode of operation in which public safety personnel kept track of calls for service and location and other information using “pen and paper.”

    Hayward will remain under a local emergency indefinitely. Officials said the designation allows the city to respond more flexibly to the cyber crisis by suspending certain rules and regulations to obtain equipment and protect city staff, residents and property.

    In what’s become a familiar refrain this week, Chuck Finnie, a city spokesperson, said no evidence has yet been found of a breach or theft of confidential or private personal information of current or former city employees, residents or other members of the public. If such evidence is found, the city will contact those affected directly, he said.

    The cyberattack was detected before sunrise Sunday, Finnie said, adding that intruders managed to penetrate city defenses “but weren’t in there for very long.” He said the city continues to evaluate the ransomware “infection.”

    “We assume that they don’t just get in, get caught and go away,” Finnie said.

    He declined to comment on the people who may be responsible for the attack or whether hackers have presented any demands for payment to the city.

    The attack has also caused disruptions to the city’s electronic permitting and payment services. The online portal to submit permit applications for development projects, pay fees and schedule inspections remained offline Friday; the permit center at City Hall has temporarily expanded its hours in the meantime. And Finnie said public-facing electronic payment systems have also been interrupted, such as the city’s bill-payment kiosks at City Hall. Finnie said grace periods are being offered to those burdened by system disruptions.

    Hayward is the latest East Bay city to be hit by a ransomware attack this year, following a February attack against Oakland that resulted in the exposure of sensitive personal data stored by the city and a class-action lawsuit by employees. And experts say local governments can be particularly vulnerable to attacks.

    Local governments “don’t pay enough attention to security,” said Levent Ertaul, a Cal State East Bay professor who specializes in cybersecurity issues and chairs the computer science department, speaking generally. “Their systems are not up to date, and they don’t have, maybe, enough budget to update the systems.”

    In Hayward, the attack shows emergency dispatch systems can be disrupted, potentially exposing police officers, firefighters and the public to added risk. Salinas, the city’s mayor, said in an interview some emergency communication systems were compromised amid the cyber intrusion.

    A review of police and fire dispatch transmissions by Bay Area News Group showed disruptions being reported by emergency personnel in the early morning hours Sunday, including the failure of the city’s computer-aided dispatch system, or CAD; problems with officers’ mobile car computers; and the inability to run vehicle license plates for associated information.

    “All systems have gone down,” a dispatcher alerted city firefighters sometime between 5:30 and 6 a.m. Sunday, according to transmissions archived by Broadcastify.

    The full scope of the disruption on dispatching services has remained unclear. City officials have repeatedly declined to comment on police and fire operations in the wake of the cyberattack, only stressing that 911 dispatching services and police and firefighter response times have been maintained.

    Scott Zuschin, a private investigator who served as a law enforcement officer in California for 20 years before retiring from the Chico Police Department in 2018, said CAD systems can automate many call-taking tasks, keep track of officers in the field using GPS and serve as an electronic filing cabinet for such information as address history and warrant information. CAD systems can also be used to access DMV records and the National Crime Information Center, a federal index that stores information about a person’s criminal record history, stolen property, missing people and fugitives.

    When a CAD system fails, accessing criminal justice information can take more time for local agencies, and they may turn to outside agencies for assistance, Zuschin said.

    “A lot of things that were made very easy by CAD are now extremely time-consuming, and probably causing a great amount of officer-safety issues for the cops out in the field,” Zuschin said. He added: “Proactive traffic stops are probably put on hold until this is resolved.”

    The Alameda County Sheriff’s Office confirmed it was assisting the Hayward Police Department but did not comment further.

    “We’re certainly not out of the weeds,” Mayor Salinas said in an interview, adding that his top concern is ensuring sensitive information about city employees, members of the public and transactions is protected. “This is definitely a front that we really need to continue focusing on. … Just like we focus on public safety.”

    1
    www.eastbaytimes.com Chipotle Mexican Grill tests robot that can skin avocados

    The Newport Beach-based chain is looking for ways to shorten the making of guacamole without losing the human touch.

    Chipotle Mexican Grill tests robot that can skin avocados

    All hail the Autocado 🥑

    4
    www.eastbaytimes.com Affordable homes project in San Jose heads toward construction start

    A big development of affordable homes in San Jose has landed the financing it needs to launch construction as soon as this month.

    Affordable homes project in San Jose heads toward construction start
    4
    www.eastbaytimes.com Liberals, conservatives self-sorting into red, blue states

    “Democrats want to live in places with artistic culture and craft breweries, and Republicans want to move to places where they can have a big yard,” said Ryan Strickler, a political sci…

    Liberals, conservatives self-sorting into red, blue states

    Something I think we've all kinda known has been happening, but interesting to see the reporting on which states are which.

    7
    theintercept.com After Overturning Roe v. Wade, SCOTUS Treats Itself to Sprawling Security Detail

    After the Dobbs decision leaked, the Supreme Court more than doubled its protective detail, despite no evidence of a heightened threat.

    2

    🌊🛥️🌊🐳🐳🐳🐳🌊

    www.theonion.com Orcas Explain Why They Are Attacking Boats

    Following numerous incidents in the Strait of Gibraltar, The Onion asked orcas to explain why they are attacking and sinking boats, and this is what they said.

    Orcas Explain Why They Are Attacking Boats

    Can't believe there aren't any orca emojis 😔

    1

    CA considering bill to limit deposits to 1 month

    calmatters.org A break for renters? California considers reining in high security deposits

    How much security deposit is too much? California landlords could lose the ability to charge as much as three times monthly rent.

    I've done 2 months personally (first and last), but most of my places have done 1 month. 3 is insane.

    What has everyone else been seeing?

    3

    Why can't I see some posts from reddthat?

    Trying to better understand how federation works - from reddthat, I can't see the pine tree and Siberian hogweed posts in the screenshot. Both those users are from instances that we're federated with.

    Is it time based? I only joined that community today, and those posts are from days ago.

    Edit: some hours later, I can now see those posts posts from this instance 🥳

    9