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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/)B
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10 mo. ago

  • Interestingly this doesn't even mention China's Xi'an Freight train to Iran's Aprin port. They have a train bypass operational.

  • What I Learned

    1. The internet is loud

    Your server isn't special. Nobody is "targeting" it. Every IP address on the internet is being continuously probed by automated systems. Within seconds of exposing port 22, you will receive login attempts. This isn't a question of "if" but "when" — and the answer to "when" is "immediately."

    1. Most attackers are dumb

    99.6% of the visitors never went beyond a single automated command. They're not hackers — they're scripts running on compromised machines, following instructions from a C2 server, executing the same uname command a million times a day across millions of IPs. The vast majority of internet "attacks" are just noise.

    1. The few smart ones are very smart

    That French IP with the /dev/tcp/ trick, rotating C2 infrastructure, and UPX-packed binaries? That's professional-grade offensive tooling. The gap between the bottom 99% and the top 1% of attackers is enormous.

    1. Crypto is a magnet

    The volume of attempts targeting Solana node credentials (solana/sol/validator/node) was surprising. Running crypto infrastructure on a publicly-accessible SSH port without key-based auth is actively being hunted.

    1. Some people are just curious

    The explorer from Cameroon, the slow typer from Berlin, the person from Bangladesh poking around /var and creating text.txt — these aren't malicious actors. They're curious humans who found an open door and wanted to see what was on the other side. They didn't download malware or try to establish persistence. They just... looked around.

    1. Nobody reads the MOTD

    The honeypot displays a full Ubuntu welcome message with system stats when you log in. Not a single interactive user appeared to notice or care that the system information was suspiciously static. First thing they do? ls.

  • 2026 has very few independent economic shock absorbers left. The fiscal buffers, the commodity redundancies, and the geopolitical stability that allowed the world to absorb 1997's super El-Nino within five years have all been materially eroded.

    The 5-Year Cumulative Loss Estimate is $15 trillion on the low side and $35 trillion on the high side. And our global base is 110-115 trillion annually.

    Expect famine, climate refugees, more possible conflict, and likely some nation state debt defaults.

  • Coupled with Russian Economic challenges (GDP shrinking, deficit increasing sharply, unemployment at historic lows, high interest rates...) I am guessing that this is now more of Ukraine War to Lose, as mitigating the windfall puts Putin in a very tight spot. Maybe he can leverage the Arctic ports to ship more oil out, but not enough to make up the deficit by winter. He still has to spend a bunch on the Free Economic Zone they have captured, but it's entirely a white elephant.

    Ukraine could still fall prey to Trump's whims, or Putin's influence (of other countries), or Putin could act rash an pull out the big weapons, but none of that "wins" this war. Conventional manpower is still the major constraint for both sides. I expect some sort of unconventional endgame here (armistice, long-term grey zone warfare, something other than negotiated peace), but one of those possibility is regime change... Not at 66% approval, but that rating will finish asymptotically if he doesn't figure the money out.

  • Image from the article:

    One from Wikipedia

    The thing is that it's not just Lime who does this. Makes me wonder if there are other eBikes with a heavy unistrut style bikes which are doing this?

  • Yea, keep bitchin Putin. You started this war and while Ukraine isn't going to win it outright, it has found a way to survive and potential thrive with the EU behind it. It doesn't even NATO at this point. Ukraine found away to adapt, sustain, and build global alliances. Russia has a axis of frienemies, and a dependence on oil ports that just keep getting blow up.

    It can't even hold the Free Economic Zone it invaded as it's in a budget crisis over holding it, but giving it up means a political loss. Couldn't happen to a better bunch of idiots.

    We could talk about the demographic flip and failure Russia is seeing because of this. Ukraine will see this too, but has better chances at being it's diaspora and new immigrants in.

    Oh, and my original point was that Europe was in this fully when the defense industry from around the world started build industrial based in Ukraine putting their skin in the game.

  • Absolutely bullshit in a headline, but also potential mamas will probably use this often. The value in hearing your baby's heartbeat is probably a huge reassurance to many.

    Having said that, as a hardware professional, when could we see a consumer accessible mobile ultrasound? I don't have a spare $2-5k for what they use in ambulances, but I am hoping something low res low quality is accessible in a few years. (Having just read about the open source phased array, I have new hope for many things).

  • While I understand the taco sentiment, I actually think this might stick for a bit. There's a huge amount of back end political pressure on this and Israel is probably feeling it too. Asia & Europe are at their oil breaking points (Asia is in particular struggling to get oil even at inflated prices), and that frankly is most of it, but you also do have the hardware expenditures yearly budgets spent in days. No one except Israel and Iran hardliners really want this war.

  • No no, you should feel valued! You played, you learned, you moved on.

  • I was hoping someone else would catch that. Fuck making a real value, just make it seem like it.

    Asshats. May their stock go down like the Titanic and their management find mud pits.

  • Beyond cutting prices, PepsiCo is also rethinking its overall game plan to get sales back on track. In December 2025, the company said it would shrink its product lineup by about 20 percent, focusing more on its biggest, best-selling brands while cutting down on less popular items. At the same time, it’s investing more in promotions and tweaking package sizes to make its snacks feel like a better deal for shoppers.

  • Zscaler ThreatLabz researchers recently discovered a highly deceptive campaign leveraging the leak as a social engineering lure to target developers seeking access to the source code.

    In this newly discovered campaign, attackers have established malicious GitHub repositories that masquerade as the authentic leaked repository.

    One prominent page, published by a threat actor named idbzoomh, currently ranks near the top of search engine results for users attempting to find the files.

    The repository promises an unlocked version of the enterprise software featuring no usage limits. Instead of legitimate code, the provided zip archive contains a Rust-based dropper executable.

    Upon execution, this dropper deploys the Vidar information stealer to siphon sensitive credentials and GhostSocks to proxy network traffic.

  • This is another view on what happened on Sunday in California. Batteries charged heavily throughout the day, soaking up the excess solar, approaching charging rates of 10 GW at times. In the evening, most of the output was centred on the early evening peak, but batteries supplied a significant share throughout the evening.

    The biggest loser in this transition has been gas, with the share of battery storage staying at high levels throughout the evening peak. On Sunday, it stayed above 20 per cent of grid demand for almost four hours.

    As Fulghum noted: “To put that kind of output during peak demand hours into perspective, it’s equivalent to the output from:

    • 15-20 combined-cycle gas plants
    • 6 Hoover dams
    • More than the all-time peak demand of Portugal or Greece.”
  • Nice eval and analysis. I am finding it more and more obnoxious that lemmy doesn't seem to like true debate. Take the down votes as a good sign that you struck a possible cord of reality.

  • It does. Missiles are $30k or £100k+

  • The Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory is in the former ghost town of Gothic, abandoned after the closure of its silver mines. Over winter, the landscape lies quietly under a bed of snow. In early spring, the only way for researchers to get to experimental sites – at an altitude of 10,000ft – is by skiing across country.

    Electric infrared radiators warmed five experimental plots of 30 sq metres year-round. Head-height heaters were on day and night over a patch of meadow, keeping it 2C above normal temperatures with an annual electricity bill of $6,000 (£4,450). They warmed the top six inches of soil. Animals could come and graze and the natural system was preserved as much as possible.

    Over 29 years, researchers found that shrubs increased by 150% in warmed plots compared with those without warming. The surface of the soil was dried by up to 20%, and shallow-rooted plants became stressed. Some wildflowers went extinct in heated plots. "It's a sign of things to come," says lead researcher Lara Souza from the University of Oklahoma.

    Scientists also noted big changes in the invisible world of soil fungi and microbes. Shrubs and sage brush don't rely on fungi in the same way as grasses. They found a decline in fungi that help plants acquire nutrients, and an increase in fungi that decompose organic matter. "This highlights that when you have a big change above ground, you've likely got a big change below ground," says Souza. "Turning back is very unlikely."

  • As The Soup, I bequeath the honor of my crest! Slurp thy in my name!

  • Geopolitics @lemmy.world

    Why Escalation Favors: Iran America and Israel May Have Bitten Off More Than They Can Chew

    www.foreignaffairs.com /iran/why-escalation-favors-iran
  • Lemmy Shitpost @lemmy.world

    As Lemmy's Ice beans the only ICE we need, right?

  • United States | News & Politics @midwest.social

    Your National Park Visit Seemed Normal. Rangers Say It’s an Illusion.

    www.backpacker.com /news-and-events/news/national-park-ranger-crisis-rocky-mountain/
  • Ask Lemmy @lemmy.world

    Has USA crime actually dimished in 2025?

  • News @lemmy.world

    Hotly contested mayoral election isn’t just about the candidates. The NYPD’s future is also at stake

    edition.cnn.com /2025/11/01/politics/nypd-nyc-mayoral-election
  • News @lemmy.world

    Stephen Miller Sparks Suspicion After ‘Glitch’ on CNN When He Mentioned ‘Plenary Authority’

    time.com /7324096/stephen-miller-plenary-authority-cnn-glitch-trump-national-guard-deployment/
  • United States | News & Politics @lemmy.ml

    Stephen Miller Sparks Suspicion After ‘Glitch’ on CNN When He Mentioned ‘Plenary Authority’

    time.com /7324096/stephen-miller-plenary-authority-cnn-glitch-trump-national-guard-deployment/