What is Hackers' Pub?

Hackers' Pub is a place for software engineers to share their knowledge and experience with each other. It's also an ActivityPub-enabled social network, so you can follow your favorite hackers in the fediverse and get their latest posts in your feed.

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"This analysis suggests that the tank had to be positioned within close range (13–23 metres) of the car when it fired the shots that killed Layan. At such proximity, it is not plausible that the shooter could not have seen that the car was occupied by civilians, including children."
forensic-architecture.org/inve
@palestine@lemmy.ml @palestine@fedibird.comPalestine_Group

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보이스피싱 악질들인게 자다가 전화내용이 들리는데 이상해서 나가가지고 어머니한테 이거 보이스피싱 인 것 같은데 카드사에 전화를 해보라고 해도 니가 뭘아냐 아니다 좀 저리가봐라 해서 환장할뻔 했는데 카드사에 전화해보라 해서 전화하셨더니 거기선 만들어진 카드없다고 하니까 그때믿길래 다행이였지 안믿고 돈납부했으면 큰일이었음 그 뒤로 저한테도 전화와서 서울중앙지검 수사관 어쩌구하면서 제앞으로 사건접수되있다며 겁주길래 학원에서 그라데이션 분노했고... 그런전화 자주오는데 그럴때마다 속에서 분노가 치밀어요

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一堆資料砸下來說要做FAQ
都要時間篩選整理啊 :blobcatphoto_frustration: 範疇又超多

什麼事情都說容易,這麼容易就自己幹啊

反正怎麼都會被罵,就亂丟出去好了誰怕誰

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From an "Other 98%" post on fb:

"Minneapolis isn’t “responding” to ICE anymore. Minneapolis is organizing to OUTLAST ICE. After weeks of escalated federal immigration enforcement in Minnesota, the Twin Cities are doing something the rest of the country keeps saying it wants but rarely builds: an everyday, neighborhood-level infrastructure that makes state violence harder to pull off in silence.

Here’s what that infrastructure looks like on the ground: Signal chats that spread sightings in minutes, people walking around with whistles, neighbors showing up fast when someone’s being cornered, and ordinary folks choosing “I’m watching” as a civic identity.

In a Jacobin interview, Minneapolis organizer Aru Shiney-Ajay describes a staggering density of participation, including neighborhood chats reaching “over 4 percent” of residents and rapid-response patrol chats that hit 1,000 people in a single neighborhood by late morning.
That matters because ICE thrives on logistics and isolation. You cannot “community statement” your way out of a federal dragnet. You have to interrupt the machine where it eats and sleeps and hides.

That’s why Minneapolis didn’t just stay defensive. It went on offense.
Activists have targeted the “pillars” that let ICE operate like an occupying force: hotels, rental cars, corporate partners, the quiet, normal places where repression refuels.

A local campaign that pushed a Hilton-branded hotel to refuse service to ICE, triggering national blowback and a corporate scramble. What makes this smart isn’t the spectacle. It’s the leverage. A regime can ignore outrage. It can’t ignore friction inside the supply chain that keeps its agents moving.

Then came the proof-of-concept flex: the January 23 “ICE Out” general strike day in Minneapolis and beyond, called by unions and community groups as a refusal of business as usual under terror.

This was a muscle-building exercise: can we coordinate, can we hold lines, can we protect each other, can we make the city ungovernable for people who think they can hunt humans here?
This is what resistance looks like when it grows up. Not just rage. Routines. Not just protest. Infrastructure.

And that’s the real exportable lesson: if you want ICE out of your city, don’t wait for permission from pundits or politicians. Build networks that make disappearance difficult, complicity expensive, and solidarity automatic."

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