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This Week in Matrix includes an announcement that I find interesting:

The Homeserver Decentralization Community Group aims to promote decentralization of the Matrix network by fostering a smoother onboarding experience (to homeservers and clients) on homeservers other than matrix.org, and might propose additional measures in the ecosystem as a whole. It is not an official Matrix Foundation Working Group, but aims to become one.

See the link for more details.

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This article by Nancy Flores originally appeared in the April 6, 2026 edition of Revista Contralínea.

Civil organizations warn that, within the framework of the USMCA review, the Secretariats of Economy –headed by Marcelo Ebrard– and Agriculture –headed by Julio Berdegué– are pressuring to prevent the future Regulations of the General Law on Adequate and Sustainable Food from including the requirement that the agri-food industry inform consumers –through the use of clear front-of-package labeling– when its products include genetically modified organisms (GMOs, popularly known as transgenic organisms), or if highly toxic herbicides, such as glyphosate, were used during their production.

The Secretariats of Health—primarily responsible—Science, and Environment are also involved in drafting these regulations, and these ministries are allegedly yielding to the interests of transnational corporations. This is despite the fact that in the United States, this industry is required to label foods containing GMOs, the organizations point out. They also note that the federal government is in default, as the regulations should have been published in October 2024. In other words, more than a year and a half has passed without this mandate being fulfilled.

In an interview with Contralínea, biologist and independent researcher Érica Hagman explains that the General Law on Adequate and Sustainable Food establishes that, based on everyone’s right to choose and to know, processed and ultra-processed foods must be properly labeled. “It’s also worth mentioning that foods containing genetically modified organisms are already labeled in various countries, including the United States. In the United States, GMO food labeling has been mandatory since 2022.”

“We have the right to choose what we want to eat and also to be given information about the harms and risks associated with processed foods, GMOs and highly dangerous herbicides.”

For her part, Mercedes López – international director of Vía Orgánica and common representative of the Lawsuit against Genetically Modified Corn – explains to this weekly publication that the Regulations should have been issued 180 days after the Law was published (which occurred on April 17, 2024). “This deadline expired on October 15, 2024, and therefore the responsibility falls to the Secretariat of Health.”

Mercedes López emphasizes the importance of this Regulation becoming a reality, because it will make the Law effective and guarantee food sovereignty, “which implies continuing to plant our traditional products that come from the milpa, and which were the basis of a very healthy diet, and also very sustainable in terms of the environment.”

She adds that this delay can be attributed to pressure from transnational corporations: “What we’ve noticed is that there are many vested interests from people in various ministries, including some groups within the Secretariat of Health itself, who have very close corporate interests; some come from FEMSA, which owns Coca-Cola, and other groups that sell these ultra-processed foods and beverages.” She also mentions that these same interests have been identified in the Secretariats of Economy, Agriculture, and Science.

For her part, Professor Hagman indicates that this Regulation should establish labeling similar to that required in the United States – where a lawsuit was even won in 2025 requiring ultra-processed foods to be labeled –: “We are not talking about a label that says it does not contain GMOs, because that is a type of labeling that exists in the United States – a voluntary labeling that has been in place for about 15 years called the GMO Project, and it is also an independent project –; that is not the labeling, I am talking about mandatory labeling that informs that the food contains genetically modified organisms.”

The independent researcher adds that, since the General Food Law was published in 2024, this labeling should have been mandatory. Regarding the context of the USMCA review, she states that it does not contradict the United States. And she questions: “Or do Americans have more rights than we Mexicans to know what we are eating? Well, I don’t think so. Therefore, there is no excuse, for example, to eliminate it from the Regulations, since this labeling issue is already included in the General Food Law.”

Professor Hagman adds that the industry also lacks arguments regarding additional costs to its processes: “There may be concern that [the labeling] will increase food prices, because the industry will have to conduct studies to see if the food it is selling, that it is processing, contains GMO ingredients. That is false: that is resolved with traceability.”

In this regard, he explains that in the United States and European countries where labeling is already mandatory, there is traceability: “basically, it’s the clear and transparent transfer of information from the moment the seed is purchased and planted.” This means that the place where GMOs are planted must inform the buyer of the harvest, which is the next step in the chain, about the “transgenic event.” They must inform “whoever will collect, let’s say, those grains, which could be an exporting company. That exporting company then has to inform the importing company. And there, for example, there might be a control mechanism, which is customs. This transfer of information is free of charge.”

Regarding the inspection by the authorities, he points out that all agri-food imports are already regulated by the Biosafety Law; “therefore, it is not a new responsibility. It is not a new area of ​​competence, and it does not generate a new cost; it is something that should already be happening.” In the traceability chain, he adds that the importer, in turn, must notify that the imported product contains GMOs “to the entity concentrating the seeds. Then, to the company that will process those grains, that will transform them into ingredients. And in that way, there is no additional cost.”

Hagman reiterates that biosecurity authorities are already obligated to establish inspection and surveillance points, so this is neither a new responsibility nor does it imply a greater expenditure of public resources. He adds that it is not an impediment either, because it will not increase costs.

“We want to be informed; we want to know what we’re being sold, whether it contains residues, whether it’s made with or based on genetically modified organisms, and we also want information about conflicts of interest, about the potential or proven harm caused by pesticide residues, genetically modified organisms, or ultra-processed foods. We need this clear information so we can choose what we want to eat and how we want it to be produced and processed or are transformed.”

Interviewed separately, Hagman and López agree that there are four non-negotiable points in the future Regulation: respecting the precautionary principle and food sovereignty; including mandatory labeling of GMOs and toxic herbicides; establishing the intersectoral government group to make the General Law of Adequate and Sustainable Food and its constitutional obligations effective, with mechanisms for citizen participation and a committee for the prevention of conflicts of interest; and promoting breastfeeding during the first six months of life, preferably almost exclusively, and for up to two years complemented with other foods, and ensuring that mothers and their children have adequate spaces for breastfeeding.

Hagman explains that food labeling and the other three irreducible rights are about human rights: “We have the right to choose what we want to eat and also to be given information about the harms and risks associated with processed foods, GMOs and highly dangerous herbicides.”

For her part, Mercedes López reiterates that the Regulation must respond to “the fundamental basic right to food, health, the protection of biodiversity, information, and the power of decision that people have. We are prioritizing these principles of public interest and prevention of conflicts of interest, in the best interests of children; also, to the strengthening of local production.”

Therefore, López called “on the federal government, on public servants, to fulfill their function: to defend Mexican society and food sovereignty, and to ensure that the Regulation is issued as firm and strong as possible.”

Advanced Law & Food Sovereignty

To explain the relevance of the Regulation, Professor Hagman explains that the General Law of Adequate and Sustainable Food is a progressive law, closely linked to the food sovereignty of Mexico.

This law, he indicates, “is in accordance with the highest, most current, most recent standards in human rights, both in the so-called universal sphere and in the regional or inter-American sphere; but it also incorporates other elements that are precisely in the discussions of these human rights spaces, such as food sovereignty.”

Regarding the concept of food sovereignty, he indicates that it has been discussed in the context of peasant movements throughout the last century. He adds that it was already stated in the 2018 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas; “and in Mexico, food sovereignty was recognized or stated for the first time in 2023, with the publication of the General Law on Humanities, Sciences, Technology, and Innovation. A year later, it was also added as a concept in this General Law on Adequate and Sustainable Food, and more recently in 2025, in the reform to Article Four of the Constitution, in the paragraph that refers precisely to the human right to food.”

Regarding food sovereignty, Professor Hagman explains that it refers to “being able to choose, to be informed, and for people collectively, in the exercise of our self-determination, to be able to express what we truly want for our agri-food systems. It is similar to national sovereignty; that is, food sovereignty is not food security, it is not food self-sufficiency, it is more similar to the constitutional concept of national sovereignty in Article 39, which resides in and emanates essentially from the people and establishes a benefit for them.”

She adds that food sovereignty is about the people, “who, in their self-determination, collectively choose what they want for agri-food systems. And what we want is no mystery: we want healthy, sufficient, quality food at fair prices. We don’t want gourmet organic food that only the rich can afford. We want fair conditions for farmers, so they can make a living in the countryside, dignified peasant economies, and we want technologies—sometimes called alternatives, but which are really agriculture itself—that are truly sustainable. From the consumer’s perspective, we want to be informed; we want to know what we’re being sold, whether it contains residues, whether it’s made with or based on genetically modified organisms, and we also want information about conflicts of interest, about the potential or proven harm caused by pesticide residues, genetically modified organisms, or ultra-processed foods. We need this clear information so we can choose what we want to eat and how we want it to be produced and processed or are transformed.”

Mexico’s Agriculture & Economy Secretariats Pushing to Stop Labeling GMO & Toxic Pesticide Use in Food News Briefs

Mexico’s Agriculture & Economy Secretariats Pushing to Stop Labeling GMO & Toxic Pesticide Use in Food

April 7, 2026April 7, 2026

Mexico’s Secretariat of Health was to have established mandatory labeling regulations a year and a half ago, but is in violation of the General Law. Critics point to industry interests.

Using Tear Gas & Water Cannon, Tlaxcala State Police Disperse Farmers & Transporters Strike News Briefs

Using Tear Gas & Water Cannon, Tlaxcala State Police Disperse Farmers & Transporters Strike

April 7, 2026April 7, 2026

The situation of FNRCM members in Tlaxcala is unknown. Meanwhile the state government announced that traffic has been restored on the roads.

People’s Mañanera April 7 Mañanera

People’s Mañanera April 7

April 7, 2026

President Sheinbaum’s daily press conference, with comments on healthcare consolidation and universal healthcare, Committee on Enforced Disappearances report, and measles.

The post Mexico’s Agriculture & Economy Secretariats Pushing to Stop Labeling GMO & Toxic Pesticide Use in Food appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


From Mexico Solidarity Media via this RSS feed

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Kristyna Janku has chosen to speak out about what happened - and football's apparent inability to make sure it does not happen again

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Great Lakes region, USA. April 2026.

I made a point to stick around the waterfowl for a while. These drakes didn't disappoint.

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But someone does ... Apparently political shitposts all get reported now?

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I'm going to set up a WireGuard server on my router. I want my mom to be able to use it but she lives very far away so setup will need to be done remotely. What's the best way to go about this? I need to share the WG config somehow.

She's not great at computers either, so any tips on how to easily install and set things up on her computer would be appreciated.

I've been trying to avoid Tailscale or Netbird, but maybe that would be the best solution in the end. I'm not interested in self-hosting a relay or management service though, I feel like I'm way too inexperienced to secure such an important system. Should anyone compromise the VPS, both me and my mom's devices would also be compromised (I assume).

Thanks!

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Beautiful (infosec.pub)
submitted 19 hours ago* (last edited 18 hours ago) by RmDebArc_5@piefed.zip to c/lemmyshitpost@lemmy.world
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Author: Frederique Mauduit
Published on: 08/04/2026 | 00:00:00

AI Summary:
Police used sticks to cut down and uproot plants across several hectares. Footage shows police and villagers pulling plants from the ground. Local farmers say they rely on poppy cultivation due to poverty and lack of basic services.

Original: 91 words
Summary: 38 words
Percent reduction: 58.24%

I'm a bot and I'm open source

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No matter how bad at your job you are you will never be as bad at your job as Pantsir crews are.

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In his news conference Monday, Donald Trump threatened to blow up every bridge and power plant in Iran, action that would be so far-reaching that some experts in military law said it could constitute a war crime.

The issue could turn on whether the power plants were legitimate military targets, whether the attacks were proportional compared with what Iran has done and whether civilian casualties were minimized.

Trump’s threat was so broad it did not seem to account for the harm to civilians, prompting Democrats in Congress, some United Nations officials and scholars in military law to say such strikes would violate international law.

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🔗

Caption:

“This is it, Jenkins—indisputable proof that the Ice Age caught these people completely off guard.”

No alt text

Disqus comments

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I think it is paywalled. If you do not use bypass paywall, see it below:

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban told Vladimir Putin during a phone call in October that he was willing to go to great lengths to assist the Russian president, including to help settle the war in Ukraine by hosting a summit in Budapest.

“Yesterday our friendship rose to such a high level that I can help in any way,” Orban said, according to a Hungarian government transcript of the call reviewed by Bloomberg. “In any matter where I can be of assistance, I am at your service.”

To underline the point, Orban recalled a children’s story he said was popular in Hungary. The Aesop fable involves a mouse freeing a lion caught in a net after it had earlier spared the rodent’s life. The remark drew a laugh from Putin, the transcript shows. Spokespeople for Orban and Putin didn’t immediately respond to emailed requests for comment.

The relationship between Orban’s government and the Kremlin is coming under increasing scrutiny as Hungarians prepare to vote in an election this weekend, with opinion polls indicating that Putin’s closest ally in the European Union could be ousted after 16 years. Hungary opposes aid to Ukraine, while Orban’s campaign is portraying President Volodymyr Zelenskiy as an enemy of the state.

The brief call between Orban and Putin, which took place around noon on Oct. 17 and whose content is being reported for the first time, provides further evidence to suggest that helping Russia is a policy that comes from the very top of government.

The two men spent much of the discussion sharing their appreciation for each other, and also for Donald Trump. Both had spoken to the US president the previous day about the potential summit in Budapest, which ultimately didn’t happen.

Trump has endorsed Orban and US Vice President JD Vance will visit Budapest Tuesday as the election campaign enters the final stretch.

In the call, Orban described the friendship with Putin as having strengthened since it first began in the Russian leader’s home city of St. Petersburg in 2009.

“The more friends we make, the more possibilities we have to resist our adversaries,” said Orban, according to the transcript, which was corroborated by a person familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified discussing confidential talks. The Hungarian premier lamented that he and Putin hadn’t been able to meet regularly in person as they had before the Covid pandemic.

Putin was then effusive over Hungary’s “independent and flexible” stance on his war against Ukraine. “It is incomprehensible to us that such a balanced, middle-ground position only generates counter arguments,” said the Russian president, according to the transcript. An anti-Ukraine campaign poster in Budapest.Photographer: Akos Stiller/Bloomberg

Some European leaders hit out at Hungary last week after a consortium of investigative news outlets, including The Insider and VSquare, published a leaked recording of a call between Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto and his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, involving removing a Russian billionaire’s sister from the EU’s sanctions list. Szijjarto dismissed the story as the work of foreign intelligence services tapping his calls and said that it’s no secret that he opposes the EU’s sanctions policy.

That report followed one in the Washington Post, citing a European security official, that Szijjarto would regularly brief Lavrov on private discussions in Brussels between EU foreign ministers.

Revelations of just how closely Hungary keeps Russia informed and works to advance its interests comes at a critical time.

Opposition leader Peter Magyar, a former insider in Hungary’s ruling elite, has vowed to steer Hungary back toward the European mainstream and away from Moscow should he prevail in Sunday’s election. Orban, meanwhile, has made anti-Ukraine messages the central theme of his campaign.

His government is obstructing a critical €90 billion ($104 billion) loan to Kyiv and last month authorities seized currency that was being transferred from Austria to Ukraine overland via Hungary. The country also continues to import Russian energy while the EU phases it out.

Orban and Putin spoke by phone as recently as March 3, where the Russian leader hailed “Hungary’s principled stance” on Ukraine, according to a Kremlin transcript. They also exchanged views on progress in agreements reached when Orban visited Putin in Moscow on Nov. 28. Orban noted then that it was their 14th meeting.

The main purpose of the October call, according to the transcript reviewed by Bloomberg, was to discuss the possibility of Hungary hosting a US-Russia meeting that had been floated at the time.

“Orban expressed willingness to lay the groundwork for holding a possible Russia–United States summit in Budapest,” according to an official readout released by the Kremlin after the call, which was in Hungarian and Russian, and lasted less than 15 minutes with translation.

According to the transcript of the call reviewed by Bloomberg, Putin walked Orban through the steps that could lead to the event, starting with a potential meeting between Lavrov and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio before deciding the “appropriate level of representation.”

The president suggested involving Szijjarto in the discussions, according to the transcript. The Rubio-Lavrov meeting didn’t happen in the end.

Hungary was one of the few, “perhaps the only,” European country that was an acceptable venue for the meeting under discussion, Putin said, adding that he agreed with Trump’s assessment that it was an appropriate location because Orban was a friend to both presidents.

The summit in Budapest didn’t take place as the US and Russia failed to agree on Moscow’s maximalist demands over Ukraine. It would have followed a meeting between Trump and Putin in Anchorage, Alaska, in August.

Both Orban and Putin were full of praise for Trump. The Hungarian premier, who has been feted by the US administration and the MAGA movement, said he admired the American president’s “tornado”-style business approach.

“As they say, he moves forward like a tank,” Putin said. “It works for him, and you can only feel joy about it.” He praised Trump’s ability to deal with various crises at the same time, including in the Middle East. The US president had recently concluded a peace agreement in Gaza. More recently, Moscow has criticized the US for attacking Iran.

The call began with Orban wishing Putin a happy birthday after he’d turned 73 earlier in October. It ended with the two leaders inquiring about their respective health.

“I exercise, I also ski. I know you play football,” the Russian president said, according to the transcript. “I try,” Orban replied, to the laughter of both men. The Hungarian premier then thanked Putin and said good-bye in Russian.

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