AernaLingus [any]
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AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
World News@lemmy.ml•Hispanic support for Donald Trump's deportations surgesEnglish
16·6 months agoTHEY’RE COMING FOR YOU NEXT YOU DUMB MOTHERFUCKERS. AAAAAAAAAAAGH
Don’t forget the immortal science of Marxism-Leninism
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Inside CRACK99: Xiang Li, Software Piracy, and the Price of KnowledgeEnglish
37·8 months agoFrom 2008 to 2011, Li made CRACK99 a reliable black-market marketplace, one that netted an estimated $100 million in sales. His inventory, investigators later said, was valued at over $1 billion.
Since it’s not clear from this write-up, those eye-popping figures (the ones concocted by the Department of Justice) are derived from the prices that the licenses were being sold for by the original companies, so it’s not $100 million in sales but $100 million in “value” (the idea of calculating a $1 billion valuation for the digital “inventory” is even more ridiculous). If you look on the actual crack99 website, you’ll see that most of the cracked software was being sold for anywhere from twenty bucks to maybe a few hundred dollars—this guy was not making millions from this. The government’s sentencing memorandum has the details; this includes the absurd figure of $3,812,241.57 for a single software license of some CAD software called “Catia VR520”, which Li sold to at least one other customer for the princely sum of $100.
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Bankrupt 23andMe Just Sold Off All Your DNA DataEnglish
422·8 months agoShoutout to my dumbass relatives for sending their DNA to this company—thanks for nothing!
Thank you for sharing–that was a really neat demonstration, and I enjoyed seeing all the troubleshooting as well. Will definitely be subscribing and checking out more of their videos!
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
World News@lemmy.ml•Russia withdraws North Korean troops in Kursk after losses, Seoul saysEnglish
291·11 months agoMy girlfriend has not been seen for several weeks after going back to Canada
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
Gaming@lemmy.zip•A version of Snake only playable with a microscope has been made — Meet Subpixel SnakeEnglish
2·1 year agoThanks for sharing! I also had the same misconception that RGB values would map neatly to subtitles, so it was cool to learn about the more complex reality as well as the world of non-striped subpixel geometries.
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's the dumbest argument you've ever had?
4·1 year agoI feel like there’s not much to fight about. I can understand the latter perspective, but from a practical point of view it just makes sense to consistently assign it to AM/PM rather than creating an unnecessary edge case (lord knows there are enough of those with date/time systems). Also this is all made moot by the superior system: the 24-hour clock (now THERE’S something I bet you could have a good argument about!).
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's the dumbest argument you've ever had?
7·1 year agoI can’t remember the specifics (both because it was dumb and because it’s so embarrassing I think my brain is trying to protect me), but from what I recall I got into a heated argument on the internet with someone because I felt that fans weren’t cheering hard enough for a band I liked at a concert.
…yeah, I know. I’m grateful, though, because it was so colossally stupid and pointless that I had a come-to-Jesus moment and swore off internet arguments entirely. I can only imagine the countless hours of my life it’s saved me in the intervening years.
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
RISC-V@lemmy.ml•Chinese scientists vow to launch breakthrough open-source chip in 2025English
6·1 year agoI had the same thought, but it’s actually open source, from what I understand–here’s the GitHub repo for the project. Also see my other comment which has the full text of the article.
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
RISC-V@lemmy.ml•Chinese scientists vow to launch breakthrough open-source chip in 2025English
2·1 year agoFull text
A team from China’s top government research academy pledged to produce this year a processor based on the open-source chip-design architecture RISC-V, as Beijing advances its semiconductor self-reliance drive amid escalating US restrictions.
The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) will be able to deliver its XiangShan open-source central processing unit in 2025, wrote Bao Yungang, deputy director at the academy’s Institute of Computing Technology, in a Weibo post on Sunday.
Initiated by the CAS in 2019, the XiangShan project aims to develop high-performance open-source processors. During a presentation at the Hot Chips 2024 semiconductor conference in Silicon Valley in August, the CAS research team described XiangShan’s goal as eventually becoming “the Linux of processors”.
Bao, who is also the secretary general of the China Open Command Ecology (RISC-V) Alliance, said the team strives to break the traditional perception that open source means low performance and low quality. It also wants to prove that an open-source project initiated by academia can result in scalable applications.
XiangShan is part of China’s growing efforts to adopt RISC-V, an open-source chip architecture that lets developers configure and customise their designs. Chinese developers are hoping that RISC-V, pronounced “risk five”, can help them reduce reliance on foreign suppliers amid an intensifying tech war with the US.
Adopters include Alibaba Group Holding’s chip design unit T-Head, which in November 2023 released a RISC-V-based controller integrated-circuit that it planned to initially deploy in Alibaba Cloud’s data centres. Alibaba owns the Post.
The XiangShan project drew recent attention after US hacker and software engineer George Hotz last week wrote on X, asking, “Why is the top performing open-source CPU (XiangShan) Chinese? Where’s the American project to beat this?”
That post, which attracted more than 524,000 views, has led to a mild uptick in the number of stars on XiangShan’s GitHub page, according to Bao.
While US politicians have reportedly been looking at restricting RISC-V since 2023, regulatory options for the country to maintain its leadership in the field are “limited”, according to a report from the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in November. That is because the non-profit body managing the standard, RISC-V International, operates outside the US.
XiangShan has so far completed tape-outs – the final design stage of a new chip – for two versions of its processors: Yanqihu in 2021 and Nanhu in 2023, with the third-generation Kinminghu in progress, according to the project’s website.
Still, the team acknowledged on the website that “a big gap” still existed between XiangShan processors and the “mainstream industry level”.
edit: here’s the tweet mentioned in the article; in the replies, someone mentioned the “One Student, One Chip” initiative which seems really intriguing
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
World News@lemmy.ml•Leading cancer scientist Sun Shao-Cong returns to China amid US investigationsEnglish
61·1 year agoFull text
After three decades of distinguished work in the United States, world-leading cancer researcher Sun Shao-Cong has returned to China to establish a new lab in Beijing, following what a source said were investigations of him by the US government.
Sun joined the Chinese Institutes for Medical Research (CIMR) as a distinguished investigator in July, he told the Post via email last week.
Known for his pioneering research on T cells – white blood cells that fight infections and destroy abnormal cells – Sun’s roles in the US have included director of the Centre for Inflammation and Cancer at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Centre in Houston from 2014 to 2022.
Since then, he has focused on recruiting for his lab and a new immunology institute. He said his team will study the molecular mechanisms of anticancer immunity, autoimmunity and inflammatory diseases, with an emphasis on T cell function and regulation.
Sun was removed from his position in 2022 after being investigated for his ties to China, a source told the Post on condition of anonymity.
Details of the investigations remain unclear, but MD Anderson was among the first institutions to dismiss China-born researchers after warnings from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), one of their major funders, about potential theft of US scientific research.
In 2018, the NIH and the Department of Justice launched separate probes into alleged economic espionage and technology theft from China. But the investigations sparked controversy over concerns about racial profiling.
By April 2019, MD Anderson had expelled three unnamed Chinese researchers, citing conflicts of interest or undisclosed foreign income, the Houston Chronicle reported.
During a career spanning decades, Sun has received more than US$24 million from NIH-affiliated institutes, including the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the National Cancer Institute, according to the NIH RePORTER website.
In 2012, Sun was named a Cheung Kong Scholar, a prestigious talent recruitment programme supported by China’s Ministry of Education and the Li Ka Shing Foundation to foster student training and research collaboration at Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
Sun earned a bachelor’s degree in biology from Hubei University and a PhD in microbiology from Stockholm University. He moved to the US for a postdoc position at the University of California, San Francisco in 1992.
He then conducted T cell-focused leukaemia research at Pennsylvania State University’s Hershey Medical Centre, and rose to distinguished professor status in 2007 before transitioning to MD Anderson.
Sun’s research employs cutting-edge immunological and molecular biology techniques, including mouse models, to explore T cell activation, functionality, and the impact of the tumour micro-environment, according to a July job posting on CIMR’s official WeChat account.
“Professor Sun has made numerous far-reaching contributions to this field and is an internationally recognised leader,” the post said.
Although the Department of Justice’s China Initiative was terminated in 2022, US government agencies have continued to scrutinise China-born researchers.
Most investigations have failed to reach court, and a small number of prosecutions were for charges unrelated to the espionage the probes sought to address.
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's your favorite form of execution?English
1·1 year agoout-of-order
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•My torrent with the highest ratio...English
80·1 year agoMyAnonamouse
Boston Chicken & KFC Rotisserie Style Chicken.txt
lmao
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
World News@lemmy.ml•China Is Bombarding Tech Talent With Job Offers. The West Is Freaking Out.English
25·1 year agoI found this line very funny:
State funding for Chinese companies enables them to offer salaries beyond what Western companies can pay.
Source?

ASML made €8 billion in net income in 2023. TSMC, $30 billion (not Western, but mentioned in the same breath). I’m sure they could scrounge a few coins from under the couch cushions to match salaries if they wanted to.
AernaLingus [any]@hexbear.netto
World News@lemmy.ml•In a grim mirror of Japan’s economic decline, the sex trade is drawing in foreign men and trapping local women in a cycle of desperationEnglish
8·1 year agoSince the archive link didn’t help in getting the full article:
Full text
In the golden years of Japan’s economic boom, its men would venture to foreign shores, seeking the thrill of illicit encounters offered by women from poorer nations. But today, the tables have turned, with foreign men now flocking to Tokyo for “sex tourism” as the yen weakens and poverty rises.
Yoshihide Tanaka, secretary general of the Liaison Council Protecting Youths (Seiboren), painted a grim picture of the current landscape.
“Japan has become a poor country,” he told This Week in Asia at the organisation’s offices. Nearby, in a park that’s become synonymous with the city’s sex trade, young women wait for customers before the sun has even set.
Tanaka’s organisation noticed an increasing number of foreigners frequenting the park as soon as pandemic-era travel restrictions were dropped.
“But now we are seeing a lot more foreign men,” he said. “They come from many countries. They are white, Asian, black – but the majority are Chinese.”
This influx has coincided with a troubling rise in teenagers and women in their early twenties turning to the sex industry to survive, Tanaka said, alongside an alarming increase in violence.
“It’s getting worse. Much worse,” he said, shaking his head. “There are more kids here and more violence, but our organisation cannot do anything more than we are already doing.”
Tanaka’s frustration is palpable as he reflects on his decade-long struggle to support the young Japanese women who wash up in Tokyo’s notorious Kabukicho district – a maze of bars, love hotels, and host clubs where the vulnerable are often preyed upon.
Among them is Rua*, a 19-year-old who felt out of place in her high school in neighbouring Kanagawa prefecture. Arriving in Kabukicho in February with hopes of finding a cafe job, she quickly found herself overwhelmed by expenses.
“I owed a lot of money to a host, so from April I went to the park,” she said, using a euphemism for standing on the narrow streets around Okubo Park, waiting to be approached by a potential customer.
“I needed to pay off my debts and wanted to buy nice things, like clothes,” said Rua, her youthful features accentuated by a chic bob and a flair for “Gothic Lolita” fashion.
To finance her visits to her favourite host at a local club every few days, she has also dabbled in what’s known as papa katsu – finding sugar daddies to help cover her expenses.
She speaks of her work with startling nonchalance, detailing prices for an hour in a love hotel – between 15,000 yen and 30,000 yen (US$100-US$200) – like menu items. On slow days, she will meet around five men; on weekends, that number can double. Rua recently had her second abortion, a grim reality of her lifestyle.
“There are all different types of men who come to the park, but I would say that about half are foreigners,” she said. “I’ve talked to girls who have been here longer and they say that is different, that it used to be mainly Japanese men, but this place has become famous.”
Rua mentions “one English man” who is a regular customer, as well as others from Taiwan, mainland China and Hong Kong. “I’m popular because of the way I look so I am always busy,” she said.
But the risks are ever-present. “One of my friends was attacked by a Chinese man on the street a few weeks ago,” Rua said, her voice steady but laced with fear. “They were talking about the price and he suddenly got angry and hit and kicked her. She hit her head on something and had a bad injury. It happens quite often, but I have been lucky so far.”
Tanaka corroborated Rua’s experience. When she called him after her friend was assaulted, he rushed to help, taking the injured woman to the hospital. He said she was angry and wanted to file an official police complaint.
But when it came time to confront her attacker, the police were far more interested in labelling her a prostitute than pursuing justice for her assault. Faced with the reality that reporting the crime could lead to her own arrest, she withdrew her complaint.
“That is always what happens,” Tanaka said, his frustration evident. “The girls are assaulted because the customers know they will not go to the police … The men know this. They think they can do anything.”
Tanaka remains cautiously optimistic about Rua’s future, though he is acutely aware of the toll that her work will take on her mental and physical health – he has seen it countless times before. Few who frequent Okubo Park emerge from the experience unscathed.
As local police and government authorities turn a blind eye, Tanaka fears the spiral of young lives caught in a web of desperation and exploitation will only worsen, while the world watches in silence.
“I think someone is going to get killed, sooner or later,” he said. “It’s inevitable. Right now, no one cares about these girls. One of them being killed by a customer might get their attention briefly, but I expect they will soon forget again.”
*Name changed to protect interviewee’s identity


https://www.theguardian.com/science/1999/aug/24/spaceexploration