50501

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50501 is a nationwide movement of Americans standing for democracy and against the GOP Administration's undemocratic vices by protesting across 50 states to demand upholding the Constitution and ending executive overreach


Rules

I. Non-Violent / Inclusive


We must center safety while maintaining message clarity. No racism, sexism, violence, derogatory language, hate speech, personal attacks, homophobia, ageism, or other type of disparaging remarks that are abusive in nature. Attacks specifically against marginalized or vulnerable groups will not be tolerated. Violations of this rule may be met with temporary or permanent bans at moderator discretion.


II. Protect Your Information


It is imperative you guard your personal info. Any personal info will be removed to protect you!


III. Maintain Integrity


No misinformation, spam, trolling, etc. Swift removal/ban when detected. Let's keep it clean and fact-proven! Discuss relevant topics in appropriate communities.


IV. No AI or Bots


Only allowed bot is 50501. No other AI or bots are allowed here.


V. Follow Platform Rules


Abide by the platform rules as stated in the Lemmy CoC.


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  • Email: community(at)50501.chat

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founded 4 months ago
ADMINS
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In response to a question about how AI works with today's legal system, Altman said one of the problems of not yet having a legal or policy framework for AI is that there's no legal confidentiality for users' conversations.

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Attorney Bradley Edwards says the 2003 birthday book, which allegedly contains a letter from Donald Trump, is in the possession of the Epstein estate in Florida.

Edwards said he knows the Epstein estate executors personally and believes they would happily hand over the item if issued with a subpoena by Congress.

Edwards added that if the book does get released, “it should probably be set in the Smithsonian as an artifact at this point in time.

Responding to Edwards’ claims, Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna told O’Donnell he will invite Edwards to meet with the House Oversight Committee and move for a subpoena to get the book from Epstein’s estate.

The lawyer said at least 50 of the Epstein victims he has represented were under 18, with the youngest being 14.

Responding to Edwards’ claims, Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna told O’Donnell he will invite Edwards to meet with the House Oversight Committee and move for a subpoena to get the book from Epstein’s estate.

Wait a minute... Epstein's estate is coming to swoop in to save the day and clear everything up?

The estate that is still making millions on Epstein's investments with Peter Thiel?

Peter Thiel, who's companies are currently making a killing from all the government contracts he is receiving, and who secured the VP nomination for his friend JD Vance?

JD Vance who visited the owners of the WSJ before they broke the story of the birthday book?

The birthday book that Vance is claiming is both "utter bullshit," but also has no idea if it exists because WSJ won't release it?

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Itch.io just banned lgbt content at the reauest of payment providers. It is now, short of finding them and handing them food, impossible to pay the last group of artists i was giving money to, because the mechanisms of payment have decided they cannot be paid.

But I still want the stuff they've made, their back catalogues, etc.

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Age verification (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by ransomwarelettuce@lemmy.world to c/science@lemmy.world
 
 

Lately there has been a lot of controversy about age verification and it's implementation in places such as UK and US.

The main critic to this mechanism is due being done through facial recognition or a government ID which are privacy invasive.

So here is my question as someone who comes from IT, wouldn't it be possible to create a device which just gives out true or false depending if the person is of age, given some kind of piece of DNA (hair, blood, nails) ?

I known there is carbon dating, but from what I understand is a bit of complicated process. The human body however shows it's age visually and I would be interested to know if genetically there are some signs as well that could be somewhat used in a automatic process.

Again I come from IT, just curious about the implications and your takes on the problem.

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Mine has a few that I can think of but I'm definitely forgetting some:

  • Snig: a secret stash. Usually of cash but it could be chocolate or whatever. Pretty sure this one is unique but I'd love to hear otherwise.
  • Sero: (seero) seriously. This one isn't unique.
  • James floody (flew-dy) ah-doody amen: Weird chant in the hope that something comes true.
  • edit: pinchies: little bit of food before it's ready. Usually meat but as I'm cooking pancakes I just gave some pinchies and it reminded me of this thread
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Researchers believe humans’ closest relatives may have stored meat from their kills for months before eating it

For hungry Neanderthals, there was more on the menu than wild mammals, roasted pigeon, seafood and plants. Chemical signatures in the ancient bones point to a nutritious and somewhat inevitable side dish: handfuls of fresh maggots.

The theory from US researchers undermines previous thinking that Neanderthals were “hypercarnivores” who stood at the top of the food chain with cave lions, sabre-toothed tigers and other beasts that consumed impressive quantities of meat.

Rather than feasting on endless mammoth steaks, they stored their kills for months, the scientists believe, favouring the fatty parts over lean meat, and the maggots that riddled the putrefying carcasses.

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https://x.com/i/status/1948211079001051267

The GOP chair was caught off guard and scrambled—first delaying the vote, then trying to sabotage it by adding amendments to include Biden administration communications. Democrats called their bluff and agreed.

Then the GOP chair, Rep. Higgins, lied, claiming the motion FAILED until Rep. Robert Garcia forced a full roll call vote.

Ultimately, the vote passed 8-2 after 3 Republicans DEFIED their leadership and joined all 5 Democrats to pass the motion.

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Originally Posted By u/Zenith251 At 2025-07-26 02:53:06 PM | Source


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Hello all! As the title suggests, I'm looking for some help and recommendations for starting a NAS storage/backup between a few households in my family.

Apologies if this isn't the right place to ask this. This will be my first entry into something something like this, so I'm not entirely sure where to go.

What I would like to do is have an enclosure in each house and have them all sync together. Two drives will be necessary since I'll use one drive just on my own since I have a lot of files to store. The other drive I would like to partition so that each household can be given a set amount of storage.

The rest of my family isn't very tech savvy, so I would prefer a solution that is relatively straight forward to setup and troubleshoot in the rare case I might need them to do something remotely.

I would like to keep the price of the enclosure reasonable since the rest of my family is pitching in on the costs.

Some extra info I copied from one of my comments:

  • At this point, will have 2 houses, but likely 3 by next year.
  • The first two will be a short drive away, but the third will be hours away.
  • The houses are on 100/50Mb fiber. Very stable internet.
  • Me being the tech person, I'll access them every way that's available. For the rest of my family I'll likely set them up either with a hardwire or local network.
  • We will be using them as part of a 3-2-1 backup for all of our files like photos or documents. I'll be using the second drive for occasional video backup storage.
  • The shared drive will probably be 5-10 TB, depending on how much storage each household wants. The second drive for me will be around 20TB.
  • We want multiple units so we have multiple copies of all our important files in the event of something like a house burning down.

Another clarification:

We do want to access files from each NAS individually instead of having everyone connect to one master NAS. The storage will be used mainly for archival and backup, so version conflicts of individual files wont be much of a concern.

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Originally Posted By u/spaminous At 2025-07-26 01:27:05 PM | Source


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The US have a monopoly on credit card payments with Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Diners Club, etc.

Even with online payment systems like PayPal, GPay, Apple Pay.

The only Canadian option that I know of is the new Shop Pay, which is owned by Shopify. (And we all know the founder CEO, Tobias Lutke is a far-right fascist traitor who loves the idea of being a 51st state.)

Right now Visa and Mastercard are controlling what stores can sell, and what services can be provided. Censoring online content, like asking Steam and Itch.io to remove certain games.

What are examples of alternatives in other countries? I know that Japan, for example, has their own independent ones, I think?

Do you think they might be refused by American companies in order to keep their monopoly?

I'd like to know what you think.

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