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Interesting Links for 13-06-2025
- 1. Waymo rides cost more than Uber or Lyft -- and people are paying anyway
- (tags:taxi automation business )
- 2. How much is golfing at St. Andrews worth to the Scottish economy? (over $400m)
- (tags:golf Scotland business )
- 3. Recording orchestral music for a computer game (Bloodborne, Cleric Beast fight)
- (tags:games music video )
- 4. Why Israel Struck Iran Now
- (tags:Israel Iran nuclearweapons )
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Paragon Spyware Used to Spy on European Journalists
Paragon is an Israeli spyware company, increasingly in the news (now that NSO Group seems to be waning). “Graphite” is the name of its product. Citizen Lab caught it spying on multiple European journalists with a zero-click iOS exploit:
On April 29, 2025, a select group of iOS users were notified by Apple that they were targeted with advanced spyware. Among the group were two journalists that consented for the technical analysis of their cases. The key findings from our forensic analysis of their devices are summarized below:
- Our analysis finds forensic evidence confirming with high confidence that both a prominent European journalist (who requests anonymity), and Italian journalist Ciro Pellegrino, were targeted with Paragon’s Graphite mercenary spyware.
- We identify an indicator linking both cases to the same Paragon operator.
- Apple confirms to us that the zero-click attack deployed in these cases was mitigated as of iOS 18.3.1 and has assigned the vulnerability CVE-2025-43200.
Our analysis is ongoing.
The list of confirmed Italian cases is in the report’s appendix. Italy has recently admitted to using the spyware.
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Cautionary Tales – Le Mans 55: The Deadliest Race
The annual Le Mans 24 Hour race brings in hundreds of thousands of spectators to watch the giants of motor racing put their endurance to the ultimate test. Every year, technology improves and the cars get a little faster. In 1955, that push for ultimate speed results in a catastrophe that changes the sport forever.
Further reading
The primary sources for this episode were 24 Hours: 100 Years of Le Mans by Richard Williams, Juan Manuel Fangio’s My Racing Life and Mark Kahn’s classic text Death Race: Le Mans 1955 – which included an exclusive and candid interview with Lance Macklin and the eyewitness testimony of Francois Jardell.
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Earring Challenge
An assortment of them are below ( Read more... )
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[fieldposting] day 0 complete
I am already very very tired.
But.
In a magnificent example of Prosocial Mammals: yesterday, when we were like 3/4 of the way to site, I realised that I no longer had "migraine stabs" on my packing list because I had carefully arranged things so that stabs would be due on a Tuesday so I would never need to faff with stabs in a field again.
... which I completely forgot. Until. 3/4.
... so I put out a Wail addressed to Londoners who would be Heading To The Field, and one of them ACTUALLY WENT on the terrible multi-borough fetch quest to get me my stabs so I HAVE BEEN STABBED and was only one day late, not a week! which is probably going to make the next month much more pleasant! and I just. continue delighted about this.
There you go that's your anecdote of the day.
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Something fishy!
Today for work, I saw someone spell fisticuffs as "fisty cuffs" and a) that is adorable and b) it also makes me realize what a strange word fisticuffs is!
So naturally I looked it up.
c. 1600, fisty cuffes, from fist (n.) + cuff (n.) "a blow", with the form perhaps in imitation of handiwork.
Well! That's such a boring etymology, but... nice to see the spelling returned to something more like the original!
I said this on fedi and a friend's response has been delighting me ever since:
I always misread it as fishticuffs, so always had an image in my head of some kind of betta fish boxing, complete with gloves over fins
That made me giggle. They're an artist so I asked if they would draw this some time. I am wondering how a fish gets boxing gloves on its fins...
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How to Secure Yarn End on a Ball
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What does it take to stand up to tyranny?
When the thugs arrive — the Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan — who stands up to them? That’s a question raised by Rutger Bregman in his new book, Moral Ambition. Bregman, who is Dutch, was fascinated by the example of Nieuwlande, a tiny Dutch town whose residents concealed almost 100 Jews from the Nazi occupiers. “The concentration of people in hiding was higher than nearly everywhere else in Europe.”
So what made the citizens of Nieuwlande courageous? Psychologists have examined the determinants of such heroism. One influential study was conducted by Pearl and Samuel Oliner, authors of The Altruistic Personality: Rescuers of Jews in Nazi Europe and founders of the Altruistic Personality Institute. The Oliners interviewed hundreds of people who had protected Jews in Europe during the second world war. One can understand Sam Oliner’s interest in the topic: he was Jewish, born in Poland in 1930, lost his entire family and, at the age of 12, was hidden from his would-be murderers by a sympathetic Catholic peasant.
A similar project was conducted by psychologist Eva Fogelman, author of Conscience and Courage: Rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust. And yet, says Bregman, these studies of heroic acts don’t find many indicators of a heroic personality type.
“A resistance hero could be shy or self-assured, silly or serious, young or old, pious or scandalous, rich or poor, leftwing or right,” writes Bregman. There were some predictive factors, such as independence of spirit. But the heroes seemed much the same as anyone else. The only obvious distinction was the vital one: they took extraordinary risks to save others, while others did nothing.
A later analysis by sociologists Federico Varese and Meir Yaish focused on a different set of explanations. What if, rather than a matter of personality, courageous altruism was a matter of circumstance? And there was one circumstance in particular that stood out in the data: people who were asked to help almost never refused. The secret to being a hero? It was to have someone standing in front of you, demanding heroism.
In Nieuwlande, that person was often Arnold Douwes or his friend Max Léons, a two-man resistance army. On one occasion, Arnold and Max dropped in for coffee with a farmer and his wife, and soon raised the question: would they hide a pair of Jews from the Nazis?
As the farmer started to protest, Max breezily announced, “They’re man and wife — very sweet people . . . just a moment, I’ll go get them.” A moment later, they appeared. Max and Arnold stood up, “So, that’s settled. Good night!”
How rude. How presumptuous. But the Jewish couple survived.
Of course it is not a surprise to observe that people are influenced by the requests of other people. Social behaviour is often contagious. In March 2013, millions of Facebook users changed their profile picture to an equals sign as a signal of support for equality in marriage rights between same-sex and opposite-sex couples. Various factors predicted whether people would do this, but a key variable was simply that people were more likely to switch after several of their friends switched.
Switching your profile picture is a low-risk, low-consequence show of support for a cause. It’s not in the same category as defying the SS by hiding someone in your house. Back in the 1980s, the sociologist Doug McAdam drew a distinction between high-risk and low-risk activism, and argued that his fellow sociologists had been all too willing to ignore that distinction.
McAdam studied the Freedom Summer project of 1964, in which unpaid volunteers, mostly white, travelled to the American Deep South to help register Black voters and support other civil rights causes. Several of them were murdered and many of them experienced intimidation or serious violence. Like those who sheltered Jews from the Nazis, these were people voluntarily running mortal risks. Hundreds persisted, but hundreds of others, understandably, dropped out. What distinguished these two groups was not commitment to the cause — they were all committed — but close personal connections to other volunteers. It’s harder to quit, and easier to be brave, if you’re with friends.
In 1986, McAdam couldn’t draw a distinction between friends and “friends”, the people who follow each other on Facebook, Instagram or Strava. But the difference is real. In a 2010 New Yorker essay that predates our current anxiety about smartphones and social media, Malcolm Gladwell argued that the weak-tie networks of social media might be great for raising awareness and signalling support, but not so great for motivating truly brave and committed action.
“The Facebook page of the Save Darfur Coalition has 1,282,339 members,” wrote Gladwell, “who have donated an average of nine cents apiece.”
A few weeks ago, I argued that it wasn’t healthy to spend too much time thinking about Donald Trump, or, to borrow a phrase from Oliver Burkeman, to “live inside the news”. There is a risk that this seems like a recommendation to be selfish: to emulate Erik Hagerman, who lived on an Ohio pig farm and deliberately avoided the news, even donning headphones when visiting a café to avoid encountering anyone talking about politics. After Hagerman was profiled in The New York Times, he was called “the most selfish person in America”.
But Burkeman has more sympathy for Hagerman, who was reported to be spending much of his time and his savings restoring an area of wetlands for public enjoyment. He might not be risking his life, but he was solving an actual problem. It’s just possible that might be more significant than changing a Facebook profile picture.
Hagerman scandalised online opinion by cutting himself off from the news. But what truly seems to motivate the bravest, most altruistic behaviour is not a connection to the news. It’s a connection to other people.
Written for and first published in the Financial Times on 16 May 2025.
Loyal readers might enjoy How To Make The World Add Up.
“Nobody makes the statistics of everyday life more fascinating and enjoyable than Tim Harford.”- Bill Bryson
“This entertaining, engrossing book about the power of numbers, logic and genuine curiosity”- Maria Konnikova
I’ve set up a storefront on Bookshop in the United States and the United Kingdom. Links to Bookshop and Amazon may generate referral fees.
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Distance-based ISA for efficient register renaming.
- 2025‑06‑04 - Distance-based ISA for efficient register renaming.
- https://www.sigarch.org/distance-based-isa-for-efficient-register-management/
- redirect https://dotat.at/:/ENDRO
- blurb https://dotat.at/:/ENDRO.html
- atom entry https://dotat.at/:/ENDRO.atom
- web.archive.org archive.today
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Airlines Secretly Selling Passenger Data to the Government
This is news:
A data broker owned by the country’s major airlines, including Delta, American Airlines, and United, collected U.S. travellers’ domestic flight records, sold access to them to Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and then as part of the contract told CBP to not reveal where the data came from, according to internal CBP documents obtained by 404 Media. The data includes passenger names, their full flight itineraries, and financial details.
Another article.
EDITED TO ADD (6/14): Ed Hausbrook reported this a month and a half ago.
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Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Hominem

Click here to go see the bonus panel!
Hovertext:
Will shit-for-brainsing professor become a recurring bastard? Stay tuned.
Today's News:
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Tools built on tree-sitter's concrete syntax trees.
- 2025‑06‑01 - Tools built on tree-sitter's concrete syntax trees.
- https://www.scannedinavian.com/tools-built-on-tree-sitters-concrete-syntax-trees.html
- redirect https://dotat.at/:/20SJ2
- blurb https://dotat.at/:/20SJ2.html
- atom entry https://dotat.at/:/20SJ2.atom
- web.archive.org archive.today
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Interesting Links for 12-06-2025
- 1. EU puts Monaco on money laundering blacklist
- (tags:fraud money Europe )
- 2. Steven Universe Sequel Series Heads to Prime Video
- (tags:TV animation scifi GoodNews )
- 3. Houseplants Do Not Purify the Air
- (tags:air pollution plants )
- 4. Solar Orbiter offers first glimpse of the Sun's poles in breakthrough mission
- (tags:sun astronomy space solarsystem )
- 5. Cthulhu's ABCs: A Heavy Metal Muppet Parody Song about the Alphabet
- (tags:muppets language funny video cthulhu viaKirsty )
- 6. Book burning is a modern free speech test for Labour
- (tags:uk freespeech religion )
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Weaponizing dependabot: confused deputy pwn request at its finest.
- 2025‑06‑08 - Weaponizing dependabot: confused deputy pwn request at its finest.
- https://boostsecurity.io/blog/weaponizing-dependabot-pwn-request-at-its-finest
- redirect https://dotat.at/:/J4GR8
- blurb https://dotat.at/:/J4GR8.html
- atom entry https://dotat.at/:/J4GR8.atom
- web.archive.org archive.today
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delight of the evening
Okay. So.
Admin: the LRP has a variety of in-game resources. One of the more valuable ones is mithril, which gets used for all sorts of things, like armour and weaponry and building works, particularly military ones.
This event we are seeing the launch of The Cow Stock Market. This inevitably was a topic of discussion over this evening's pizza: discussion of the designs of the I Promise To Pay The Bearer On Demand One (1) Cow slips! speculation over Cow Futures! debate over the impact on the gold mithril standard!
It'll be fiiiiiiiiiine, says A. It'll all be TOTALLY fine. You can absolutely build fortifications out of cows!
-- and at this point, for those of you who are abruptly cackling, I need to point out that A has not read Nona the Ninth.
I also need to point out that I am in a specific groupchat, specifically set up following the event where someone managed to get their hands on some copies of Nona a few days before official release and there was consequently significant in-field bartering for who got to be next in the queue to inhale them, that is named after. well. the cows. did you know that cows have best friends.
But A had no idea why I was abruptly losing it, and I decided that rather than attempt to explain I was in fact first of all going to Depart Our Table, find my Nona dealers, and relate unto them the story of The Thing A, All Unawares, Just Said.
The reaction was extremely gratifying.
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They say I got brains
My ex-husband knows and thinks and cares so much about Brian Wilson that I feel like I shared a polycule with the man.
Wandering around the house tonight, doing the last chores of the evening while the Doof is finishing up, I hear "I Just Wasn't Made for These Times" and I still know all the words, still remember the pained 20somethings Andrew and I were when we met and he introduced me to this weird lonely musician and all his feelings which were also our weird lonely feelings.
There was always something terribly melancholy for me in Brian Wilson's music -- there's a demo of "Still I Dream of It" that used to make me so sad that just thinking about the song made me cry uncontrollably -- and all the more once I left my marriage and never really listened to the Beach Boys any more. And the odd time I hear them, on the radio or like now, I'm always a little thrown by how weird the commercially-released songs sound, without all the unreleased versions layered over them in my mind because those were more common in my marital home (like I said: Not a parasocial relationship for me, but a parasocial metamour).
D made sure I heard the news, and I texted Andrew once I did. I just couldn't let such a thing go by without saying I was thinking of him.
I think both Brian Wilson and Andrew eventually "found the thing they can put their heart and soul in to," as the song goes, and I'm really glad for that.
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Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Fairytale

Click here to go see the bonus panel!
Hovertext:
Fortunately it was one of those sexy romance novels, so they didn't need the man's head for the cover.
Today's News:
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the sega genesis is my favourite video game console named after a book of the bible. also i think t
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June 11th, 2025: You can read more about this paradox here, and can learn more about the trials and tribulations of Sonic The Hedgehog at your local Sega Genesis home video game console! – Ryan |