Infosec.Pub

4,853 readers
104 users here now

To support infosec.pub, please consider donating through one of the following services:

Paypal: jerry@infosec.exchange

Ko-Fi: https://ko-fi.com/infosecexchange

Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/infosecexchange

founded 2 years ago
ADMINS
1276
1277
1278
1279
1280
 
 
1281
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/itookapicture by /u/j_kickz3 on 2026-04-07 21:39:38+00:00.

1282
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/itookapicture by /u/MoanaArt on 2026-04-07 20:43:26+00:00.

1283
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/itookapicture by /u/theabstract1993 on 2026-04-07 20:30:55+00:00.

1284
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/itookapicture by /u/zjavva on 2026-04-07 19:41:07+00:00.

1285
 
 
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/itookapicture by /u/MATSUNOO on 2026-04-07 16:59:53+00:00.

1286
1287
 
 
1288
 
 

FOIA records obtained by Type Investigations and In These Times raise questions about evidence presented in Prairieland case.

1289
1290
1291
 
 

I hope you enjoyed our April Fools’ Day announcement. With that out of the way, it’s time to discuss actual upcoming changes to MAME. We’re upgrading the development language standard from C++17 to C++20 and winding back support for obsolete configurations. We’ll also be reducing the frequency of releases a bit, so there will no longer be a release nearly every month. There will be no April release; our next release will be near the end of May.

A summary of updated requirements:

A compiler and C++ standard library with a reasonable level of C++20 support. GCC 11 is the oldest version of GCC that we will support. You can also use a reasonably up-to-date version of clang.  
Windows releases will require an updated installation of Windows 10 or later. Microsoft has already discontinued mainstream support for Windows 10, as well as all prior versions of Windows Home and Pro, and Windows 11 is already four years old.  
MAME’s Qt-based debugger will require Qt 6.  

A summary of some functionality we’re removing:

The 32-bit x86 (i686) recompiler back-end. It’s been over two decades since the x86-64 architecture was introduced. All major x86 operating systems have supported x86-64 for years, and 32-bit x86 support is being wound back.  
Support for compiling on OpenSolaris and other System V UNIX systems. There are no actively developed OpenSolaris distributions remaining, and no other System V UNIX variants have a meaningful presence on desktop systems.  
Specific optimisations for PowerPC host systems. PowerPC and OpenPOWER currently have no meaningful desktop presence, and the Libre-SOC project to produce a completely free, high-performance OpenPOWER implementation has stalled.  
The obsolete aueffectutil tool for macOS. This tool is no longer relevant with MAME’s new audio output system, and it had not been updated to work with recent versions of macOS.  
The pre-built MSYS2 environments with included development tools. There are multiple issues with our MSYS2 environment that we can’t practically solve.  

Read on for some more background and details.

We’ve decided it’s time to upgrade to the next version of the C++ standard and start taking advantage of the new functionality. It’s been long enough that libraries and tools with adequate C++20 support should be widespread. We’ll support building with GCC 11 and GNU libstdc++ 11 or later for now. If you’re using clang to compile MAME, please be aware that clang 11 and 12 have unacceptably bad bugs in their implementation of C++20, and clang 13 may crash when compiling some constructs. This means you may need a reasonably up-to-date version of clang to continue using it to build MAME.

Similarly, Qt 6 is available in MSYS2 and has been provided by all major Linux distributions for quite some time. We feel it’s a good time to remove support for Qt 5.

Due to increased memory usage of newer versions of GCC and the removal of clang and other LLVM-related packages from the MSYS2 MINGW32 package repository, it’s no longer practical to create 32-bit x86 builds of MAME for Windows. As such, features for supporting 32-bit x86 on Windows will become unmaintained. Since 32-bit x86 support in other operating systems is also being scaled back, we’ve decided it’s no longer worth the effort to maintain features catering to 32-bit x86 specifically. We’re removing functionality catering to PowerPC specifically at the same time as it has become similarly impractical to maintain.

We will be switching to building x86-64 Windows release with clang, the libc++ standard library, and the Microsoft Universal CRT (UCRT) C runtime library. This will mean our 64-bit x86 and ARM releases will be built with the same tools and libraries.

It’s become apparent that support for MSYS2 environments using the obsolete MSVCRT C runtime library is being wound down. Various packages are being removed from the repositories rather than being updated. It will become necessary to migrate to one of the environments using the UCRT C runtime library, i.e. UCRT64 or CLANG64 for 64-bit x86, or CLANGARM64 for 64-bit ARM. Our build scripts currently include support for building MAME using these environments with no additional effort.

There are multiple issues with the pre-packaged MSYS2 environments we provide for download. These include:

They have not matched the exact package versions used to build MAME releases for a long time, so they are not useful for reproducing official MAME releases.  
They are updated infrequently. This makes trying to update the core MSYS2 runtime or any of the included packages fraught with issues, as MSYS2 packages often have poor support skipping multiple versions when updating.  
Including packages to support building MAME across supported configurations, as well as generally useful development tools, would make the download impractically large. On the other hand, omitting packages leads to users encountering all the issues with updating MSYS2 packages when they attempt to add packages to support their use cases.  
Packaging development tools isn’t part of our core mission, so to speak, and takes time away from working on MAME development.  

As such, we recommend installing a standard MSYS2 environment and installing packages needed to build MAME using the pacman package manager command. We list the necessary packages in our documentation, and our Windows workflows on GitHub Actions show the necessary packages in a structured form.

There will always be some bumps in the road with a major change like this, but we believe this is a necessary step as part of our mission to keep MAME development viable for the long term.

1292
 
 

The White House is seeking a record-shattering Pentagon budget of $1.5 trillion for the next fiscal year, the largest year-over-year increase in a presidential military spending request since World War II. The United States already has the world’s largest military budget at roughly $1 trillion, more than the combined budgets of the next nine highest-spending countries. The Trump administration’s…

Source


From Truthout via This RSS Feed.

1293
 
 

Is anybody else having trouble with Stremio over the last few days? Everything was smooth until after the weekend. Now it will barely play anything without kicking me out or crashing - external player or not.

It seems like there is a connection error, maybe?

I will mention I did renew the real debrid subscription which seems fishy - I used to use TorrentioRD+ but it doesn't recognise my subscription so I can only use Torrentio.

Any advice would be great because the internet is kinda useless.

1294
 
 

From Wyoming News

Across the nation there is an unseen shortage; in Wyoming, some of the state’s smallest long-distance travelers are not coming home.

Over the past 50 years, the population of birds as a whole across North America has dropped by nearly 3 billion birds, according to an estimate through 2019 research by Rosenberg et. al. This means that just over one in four birds in 1970 is no longer present across the landscape today.

Among this national decline, the burrowing owl population has dropped by about 55% during the same period, according to the North American Breeding Bird Survey. Out of the 254 species tracked by the survey, this places burrowing owls among the 30 fastest declining birds in North America.

This decline has contributed to Wyoming Game and Fish’s designation for the owl as a species of greatest conservation need.

However, the root of this rapid decline for burrowing owls is yet to be fully understood.

“I’m really hoping that we can learn from this larger study where the pinchpoints are in the annual cycle of burrowing owls,” explained Zach Wallace, statewide nongame bird biologist with Wyoming Game and Fish.

For a little more than seven years, the burrowing owl population and the full annual migration cycle of these owls have been tracked through collaborative research.

“It’s the biggest burrowing owl project that’s ever been done in the western U.S. so we have gotten a lot of good information from that project and it’s still ongoing,” Wallace said. “We’re awaiting the final results.”

Andrea Orabona, who formerly worked as a biologist for Wyoming Game and Fish, has been heavily involved in the project, alongside Courtney Conway and researchers with the University of Idaho.

Orabona said that reduction to burrowing owl habitat and lower populations of prairie dogs and grasshoppers may be critical factors to the decline of the owls.

In the Western United States, burrowing owls depend on prairie dogs to dig their burrows and grasshoppers for food. Orabona said that pesticide use within agriculture is likely a significant contributor to this reduction in grasshoppers.

The nature of the burrowing owl habitat may also mean that recreational use of these landscapes may play another role in the decline of the owls; however, research on human impact during recreational activities like hiking, biking and hunting is still minimal.

“Most of their distribution in Wyoming is in the low-lying basins of the state, so they’re on working lands, multiple-use lands, suburban areas, sage-brush steppe and prairie-type habitats. There are a lot of different activities going on on those lands, and so monitoring the species and conserving the species requires collaboration,” Wallace said.

For Orabona and other researchers, this collaboration heavily relies on data from little “backpacks” — tracking devices — that the project has attached to burrowing owls across over six U.S. states and two Canadian provinces.

“We look for burrows that have nesting activity,” Orabona explained, with researchers scouting out active burrows before trapping for the owls begins. “They are very efficient.”

Traps with food are placed, owls are tagged and equipped with tracking devices, the health and size of the birds is assessed and the birds are released. Orabona said that the whole process can take less than 15 minutes.

“Once captured, we band each owl with an individual, uniquely numbered band,” Orabona explained.

She said that before release, and as the birds begin to fly, researchers carefully assess if the placement of the devices interferes with flight or movement; any interference could not only skew the data of their study, but it could pose a significant risk to the safety of the bird.

These tracking devices follow the owls along their long-distance winter migration. Burrowing owls generally travel south to southwestern U.S. states and Mexico — distances that can reach anywhere from 500 to 2,000 miles.

The longest distance recorded for the migration of a burrowing owl was 4,500 miles.

“From an applied management perspective, we also get a lot of different kinds of information out of a study like this potentially. Some of those are basic information about how the species uses space: How big is its home range? How much space does it need?” Wallace reflected.

Wallace said this information can also be informative to when burrowing owls are active in Wyoming and more precise information about when they begin to migrate out of the state. For Wyoming Game and Fish, this can provide information as to when to prioritize conservation efforts.

“There’s no way that we could accomplish bird conservation without extensive collaboration,” Wallace said.

While research is still ongoing, Orabona said that she is hopeful that following the unique patterns of the owls migration will give more insight into where pressure points for threats for the bird’s population lie.

“It’s a way to synthesize what’s going on on the landscape,” she explained. “It’s not just one problem.”

Research efforts continue, with primary tracking efforts shifting north to Montana.

“With a study like this … they have the potential to answer all kinds of questions,” Wallace said.

1295
1296
 
 

Despite a lighter touch on outright terror than some horror fans might wish for, Star Trek: Infection succeeds as both a survival horror game and a Star Trek experience. It captures the unsettling horror that has occasionally appeared within Trek and centers it to great effect in VR. It's a tonally perfect fit for fans of the franchise, and an atmospheric sci-fi scare for everyone else.

1297
 
 
WordWavr #44 4/6 🌊
🟡 89%
🟡 90%
🟢 97%
🟢 100%

1298
 
 

Relevant tweet:

A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will. However, now that we have Complete and Total Regime Change, where different, smarter, and less radicalized minds prevail, maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen, WHO KNOWS? We will find out tonight, one of the most important moments in the long and complex history of the World. 47 years of extortion, corruption, and death, will finally end. God Bless the Great People of Iran!

Source

1299
1300
 
 

Researchers at Umeå University have contributed new insights into how cancer cells protect themselves from cell death. The study provides a deeper understanding of how key proteins interact within the cell and could, in the long term, support the development of new cancer therapies.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

view more: ‹ prev next ›