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US Supreme Court Rules Geofence Warrants Require Constitutional Privacy Protections

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 (PDF) in Chatrie v United States (No. 25-112) that geofence warrants sweeping up smartphone location data constitute searches under the Fourth Amendment. The Court found that individuals have a "reasonable expectation of privacy" in such data, even when the tracking covers only a brief period or records movements in public. "An individual has a reasonable expectation of privacy in records about his cell phone's location, and police intrude on that constitutionally protected interest when they demand the information -- even though for only a limited time, and from a third-party tech company," wrote Justice Elena Kagan. Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 submitted the story. The Guardian reports: The use of geofence warrants is widespread, and gives law enforcement agencies the power to compel tech companies to hand over sensitive cell phone data from people at or near crime scenes. The warrants allow police and the FBI to collect this information from individuals within the radius of a virtual "fence" during a particular timeframe. But they are not restricted to requesting data for precise targets.

The Chatrie case focuses on local police's pursuit of an armed bank robber in Richmond, Virginia. He fled with $195,000. Law enforcement tracked Okello Chatrie down through their use of geofence warrants. Chatrie had opted in to an optional Google "location history" feature that documented his location every few minutes. He was eventually sentenced to 12 years in prison, after pleading guilty. Chatrie's lawyers argued that this search was overly broad and violated his fourth amendment rights, which protects individuals from "unreasonable search and seizure." Lawyers said that police's use of geofence warrants amounted to an official "search" under the fourth amendment, and didn't meet the constitution's requirements for one.

The government had argued that accessing only a short amount of cellphone location information means this tactic does not count as a fourth amendment search and accordingly, should not be afforded the same privacy protections. But the judges in the majority disagreed. The judges in the majority opinion also wrote that the government's characterization of generating location history as a voluntary choice is "meritless." They suggested that people aren't choosing to share private information with third parties and the government "just by doing the ordinary thing cellphone users do." "The point of carrying smartphones is to use what is on them," including the apps and services they provide -- many of which use location data to customize a user's experience, they said.

[...] While the majority opinion noted that police conducted a fourth amendment search by accessing Chatrie's location history data, they noted that the court of appeals will weigh in on whether the "search was reasonable, meaning that each of its steps was properly described with particularity and found to be supported by probable cause." Law enforcement has said they need geofence warrants to find suspects and witnesses -- after reaching dead ends. The US government, for its part, has argued that people can't have a "reasonable expectation of privacy" when they are in public and have allowed a third party company, such as Google, to collect and analyze phone location data.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Formula 1 News

Formula 1® - The Official F1® Website

Why McNish thinks Austria was 'best weekend so far' for Audi

Allan McNish has reflected on the Austrian Grand Prix after Audi narrowly missed out on scoring points.

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Microsoft previews Linux containers that run in Windows

Now not only can you run Linux from within Windows without third-party tools, but can do so within containers. Microsoft has continued the trend of the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) being one of the company's more interesting developer technologies with the arrival of a public preview of WSL containers. According to Microsoft, the update adds a pair of new features to WSL: "A built in Linux container CLI and an API for Windows applications to run Linux containers as part of their app logic." Microsoft senior project manager Craig Loewen said, "this CLI tool has a familiar format and capabilities," and indeed it does. If Docker is something you know, the wslc.exe syntax (wslc.exe is the new binary) will be very familiar. There's also a built-in alias for container.exe for users who prefer to type container instead of wslc. "Containers," said Loewen, "have become a foundational part of modern development – from cloud-native applications and AI workloads to testing and deployment pipelines. "WSL containers simplify this experience by providing a built-in, enterprise-ready way to create, run, and manage Linux containers on Windows, without requiring additional third-party tooling." WSL has always been a handy way to run Linux workloads from Windows, and is particularly convenient for Linux developers who must comply with corporate edicts to use a Windows device. The CLI for end-to-end container workflows furthers this. Microsoft stated, "WSL containers make it easier for developers and organizations to build, test, and run containerized workloads while benefiting from the security, manageability, and integration of the Windows platform." Alternatively, you could run your preferred Linux distribution natively, but that might not be an option, particularly if an organization is keen on the "security, manageability, and integration of the Windows platform." And this is an important point. WSL's existing Microsoft Defender for Endpoint (MDE) has been updated (in private preview) to be aware of Linux container events, and there are settings in Intune for managing WSL containers. Support is also in a pre-release version of VS Code, where the Docker path in the dev container settings can be changed to wslc. There is also a new default file system for WSL container that Microsoft claims makes Windows file access twice the speed. So, going from terribly slow to just slow? We'll wait until general availability is reached before passing judgment. There's a new default networking mode to improve compatibility and better memory reclaim techniques. However, none of these tweaks will be enabled by default in WSL. Microsoft wrote, "Since these changes touch mission critical paths like file system access and network, for now they are enabled just in WSL container." The company is also at pains to point out that this is currently in public preview, although things seemed quite solid in the version we downloaded to try. That said, relying on this for any serious work would be foolhardy in the extreme, but it is certainly worth trying out ahead of general availability later this year. ®

What the OCI MSA didn't solve for AI scaling

Earlier this spring, AMD, Broadcom, Meta, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and OpenAI formed the Optical Compute Interconnect Multi-Source Agreement (OCI MSA) to bring coherence to AI infrastructure and establish a specification for co-packaged optics (CPO) scale-up networks. The architecture they aligned on is a slow and wide non-return-to-zero (NRZ) modulation paired with wavelength-division multiplexing. OCI GEN1 supports four wavelengths at 50 Gbps per channel, delivering 200 Gbps per direction per fiber, and the roadmap scales to 1.6 Tbps per fiber per direction. This consortium settled the architectural debate over the direction of networking in AI. The specification defines the first step in the architecture, but leaves the harder question open: How bandwidth continues to scale, and what comes after four wavelengths. The roadmap calls for adding wavelengths on the same fiber infrastructure to grow bandwidth, but does not specify which manufacturing approach will deliver them. The road to more wavelengths is the answer First-movers have already settled this argument. The OCI MSA's founding members endorsed four wavelengths as the GEN1 starting point, Ayar Labs has been on the eight-to-16 wavelength path for years, and NVIDIA's published roadmap, "A Roadmap Toward Sub-1 pJ/b Optical Interconnect," models a 16-wavelength interconnect as the route to the energy targets the MSA aims at. The decision to use slow-and-wide is an energy-per-bit argument. Low symbol rates and simple encoding go together: NRZ carries one bit per symbol, while PAM-4 carries two but requires roughly three times the optical power to hit the same bit-error rate (BER). NRZ holds BER low enough that forward error correction (FEC) stays light, latency remains tight and predictable, and the link stays within its energy budget. On the electrical side, SerDes power per bit at 50 GBaud is roughly one-third that at 100 GBaud. That regime must be preserved as bandwidth scales, or it can be walked back. Wavelength multiplication keeps the link inside the slow-and-wide regime, whereas symbol-rate escalation walks the architecture back out of it. For readers who want the underlying physics, see "Why 'Optics When You Must' is Now." The industry can now treat increasing wavelength count as settled and turn to the next problem: Manufacturing stable precision laser arrays in massive quantities. Three eras of photonic integration Photonic integration has evolved through three manufacturing eras. Each was driven by the same forces that drove every transition in the semiconductor industry: Lower cost, higher reliability, and industrial-volume scale. The first was the discrete optical assembly era. Components were made separately from exotic materials, precisely aligned by hand, and packaged individually. Expanding system capabilities meant more components and more assembly steps, and every fiber attachment was a costly potential failure point. The cost curve was flat by construction, or even negative, as yields fell. The second era was silicon photonics. Components, including modulators, waveguides, and photodetectors, moved onto a single monolithic wafer, so a portion of the photonic stack could achieve the cost curves of the semiconductor process. Instead of scaling with assembly capacity, the silicon portion could scale by running more wafers on a single flow. The breakthrough was real but incomplete, because critical components could not be integrated. The stubborn, non-silicon III-V gain material was the holdout, and the cost curve remained partial: A high-volume foundry process bolted to a discrete-component bottleneck at the most demanding interface. The foundry flow excluded lasers, semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOA), and high-speed modulators. The third era, heterogeneous integration of all photonic materials on a single wafer, has finally arrived. Combining III-V gain material with silicon photonics brings lasers, semiconductor optical amplifiers, and high-speed modulators into a single wafer-level process. The complete photonics signal chain consolidates on the wafer, and the gain material becomes just another step in a wafer process-flow cost curve, with wafer-level cost, scale, and reliability. The trend towards ever-increasing integration is inevitable. It is the manufacturing transition CMOS underwent in electronics: A single, elegant process that absorbed new device types, compounded over generations at massive scale, and became the foundation for the modern semiconductor industry. Photonics is repeating it, just in time for the massive deployment in AI datacenters. The wavelength staircase The OCI GEN1 specification is four wavelengths at 50 Gbps NRZ, delivering 200 Gbps per fiber in each direction, with MSA channel spacing of 400 GHz. It serves as a practical starting point: Sufficient to demonstrate the architecture in production silicon and coordinate the supply chain, but not enough to support the next generation of GPUs, which will require higher bandwidth per fiber. OCI GEN1 sets the first minimum multi-wavelength standard, not the maximum. Each step up the staircase runs slow and wide, so the per-channel electronics do not change. The dense wavelength-division multiplexing (DWDM) step occurs at wavelengths of eight or more, where channel spacing tightens. System-level bandwidth scales with the number of wavelengths: More lanes, more rings, no change in per-channel design effort. Doubling the wavelengths doubles the bandwidth without doubling the design cost. Eight wavelengths deliver 400 Gbps per fiber per direction, and 16 deliver 800. Bidirectional transmission over the same fiber further reduces the fiber count, and none of it requires faster SerDes, deeper FEC, or PAM-4 power and latency penalties. Wavelengths bend the cost curve for per-fiber bandwidth and enable scale-up domains to grow from tens of GPUs today to thousands tomorrow. Multiplexing at the laser source prevents fiber-count growth, so the number of fibers per connector doesn't explode as the wavelength count rises. The bigger payoff is what cluster size unlocks, rather than raw throughput. Larger, flatter, low-latency scale-up domains enlarge working memory, extend the context window, and add transformer layers, which together support deeper reasoning, fewer network stalls, and higher GPU utilization. Today's wavelength-count decision sets the ceiling on which models the resulting cluster can run in 2028 and beyond. That gives system architects a sixth metric alongside energy per bit, latency, per-fiber throughput, and reach: Wavelength-scaling headroom on the same manufacturing flow. The question to ask is whether the supplier's light-source architecture extends to eight, 16, and beyond without re-engineering. Where the answer is no, the redesign is already on the calendar, with a two-year delta baked in. Manufacturing decides the curve The OCI MSA roadmap to 1.6 Tbps per direction per fiber is achievable on paper. The harder question is which manufacturing approach gets the industry there. Discrete-laser supply chains were not built for hyperscale volumes, and the two structural paths hit the same wall by different routes. The shared-laser path combines multiple lasers through a combiner-and-splitter network to feed a multi-wavelength source. Splitting losses scale with channel count: Every additional output tapped off the network costs the laser optical power it has to make up at the input. Each laser pushes harder to maintain budget across more channels, drive currents climb, and reliability margins erode at every wavelength step. The economics that work at four wavelengths do not extend to eight, let alone 16. The dedicated-laser path uses one laser per wavelength, and assembly complexity scales linearly with channel count when multiplexing with discrete optics. A single module supplying 16 wavelengths across eight fibers would result in roughly 128 lasers, 128 fiber alignments, and 128 monitoring photodiodes. Each alignment has to hold to micrometre tolerances across temperature swings, package stress, and years of field life, and failure-rate math compounds at every interface. Volume is the binding constraint. Hyperscale CPO will need millions of laser-source units per month, not tens of thousands, and discrete-laser approaches do not extend to those volumes regardless of which path is taken. This, rather than the architectural debate, is what has held DWDM back as a deployable architecture. The architectural debate was always going to settle here; the supply chain was not. Once the next wavelength is no longer a discrete-component assembly step but becomes another circuit element on the silicon photonics wafer, the cost of adding wavelengths follows a semiconductor learning curve. Heterogeneous integration provides that curve, and the OCI roadmap requires it. The CMOs of photonics Heterogeneous integration is the manufacturing pattern that closes the integration gap silicon photonics has carried since its inception. III-V gain materials, modulators, photodetectors, and waveguides come together in a single wafer-level flow. This is what CMOS did for electronics. CMOS established a single industrial process that absorbed transistor types, then logic, then memory, and eventually larger functional families, all within the same foundry flow. Each new device family inherited the process's cost curve rather than starting its own, and that inheritance is what lets CMOS compound over generations: Every advance in the underlying process improves every device built on it. The free ride came from the manufacturing pattern, not from the transistor. SHIP™, Scintil Heterogeneous Integrated Photonics, is the equivalent pattern for photonic device integration. The claim is pattern equivalence, not scale equivalence: Photonics is repeating CMOS as a manufacturing transition, not as a market size. The pattern is already running. SHIP™ sits on Tower Semiconductor's silicon photonics platform on 200 mm production lines today, the same lines that turn out tens of millions of pluggable optical transceivers. The 300 mm path is next. The platform is already reaching beyond the laser source. At OFC 2026, four architecturally distinct system vendors independently requested SHIP™ extensions, each pursuing a different system goal: Deeper transceiver integration, advanced optical switching, high-speed modulation at scale, and integrated amplification architectures. Each needed the same underlying capability: III-V integration into the silicon photonics flow, for optical amplifiers and high-speed modulators that pure silicon cannot deliver. None of them was solving the same problem, and the common factor was the manufacturing pattern, not the device. What comes after the first generation Two generations from now, the scale-up fabric is a multi-rack signal chain that binds thousands of GPUs into a single coherent compute domain. The fiber plant that carried four wavelengths also carries 16, then the next, without rework. Lasers, modulators, photodetectors, and optical amplifiers are circuit elements on the silicon photonics wafer, not parts assembled into modules. The interconnect ceases to be an assembly problem and becomes a process-node problem. Power per bit decreases as the signal chain no longer crosses fiber interfaces and material boundaries, and bandwidth at the package edge rises with integration density. The teams designing for that architecture today will hold the architectural position when it becomes the default. The teams that defer the manufacturing question will spend two generations rebuilding programs around suppliers who solved it earlier. LEAF Light™ is the production proof: A single-chip DWDM-native light engine, demonstrated in eight- and 16-wavelength configurations compatible with microring-based CPO transceivers and manufactured on established production lines. Scintil's Series B included participation from NVIDIA as part of broader ecosystem alignment. The OCI MSA settled the architecture. The path to ship it runs through heterogeneous integration. Matt Crowley is the CEO of Scintil Photonics. Contributed by OmniScale Media.

Arm64 on the desktop? It’s spendy and it’s sluggish

A Red Hat build engineer has ended his second experimental effort at using a high-end Arm64 desktop computer as his daily driver. His conclusions are instructive. Marcin Juszkiewicz’s series of posts on his tech blog about running a Fedora-powered beast of an Arm desktop computer has been interesting reading for about a year now. Almost exactly a year ago, he built a beast of an Arm workstation. He spent some €1,800 building a machine around an Ampere Altra, which as The Register described in 2020 is a serious bit of kit. And even at €1,800 (£1550, or $2000) quite a bit of it was second-hand, including the CPU and RAM. He described the machine’s capabilities in Arm desktop: 2025 attempt, part one. We were considering a story about the sheer cost of the kit, but his latest update describes The end of the AArch64 desktop experiment. That means it’s now more of a post mortem. To cut to the chase, he has switched back to using his AMD Ryzen 5 3600 system: the six cores of a $199 chip from 2019 outperforms an 80-core Arm64 powerhouse. Juszkiewicz, who also goes by the rather easier to spell hrw, knows his stuff, and he is a man of strong opinions. Indeed, his Mastodon profile gives a clue: “Tired of Seriously Bad Computers (SBC) so moved to Arm servers and virtualization.” SBC, of course, more normally stands for “Single Board Computers” in this industry, and by far the best-selling Arm SBC is the Raspberry Pi. As it happens, we’ve met him: the Reg FOSS desk attended a talk by Mr Juszkiewicz at the 2016 Flock to Fedora conference. We already knew that he wasn’t a fan of the Raspberry Pi devices. Also, for any doubters out there, this Altra box was not his first attempt to build an Arm64 daily-driver machine. That was back in 2015, as he described over three posts. AArch64 desktop: day one talked about the spec, involving a Mustang motherboard – which means an Applied Micro X-Gene X-C1. By day two, he started to cover issues with his distro: "I use Fedora on my machines. And as lot of people know this distribution has strange rules when it comes to multimedia support. Forget about MP3, H264 and few other things." The post talks about needing to build his own codecs and media player applets, the lack of Macromedia Flash support, and more. We note this just in case anyone is tempted to jump to the conclusion that his more recent Arm experiment failed due to a lack of knowledge or skills – he definitely has both in large amounts. After just four days, he wrote AArch64 desktop: last day, discussing the performance issues of an eight-core, circa 2.4 GHz ArmV8 computer: "OK, I can be spoiled by speed of my i7-2600k desktop but situation when Firefox with less than 20 tabs open is unable to display characters I type into textarea fast enough shows that something is wrong (16GB ram machine). And tell me that this is not typical desktop use of web browser…" He spares judging the machine too harshly: "I think that results may be affected by a fact that all I have here is Applied Micro Mustang based on X-Gene 1 cpu. It is one of first ARMv8 processors in Linux world and it is optimized for server use rather than desktop." Well, fast forward to 2025, and he still has no choice but to use a manycore Arm64 chip aimed at servers, rather than the desktop. As The Reg reported earlier this month, they are now a serious force in the server and datacentre market… but aside from Apple Silicon, not on the desktop or in laptops. This time around, in Arm desktop: 2025 attempt, part one, he starts by setting the context: "Almost ten years ago, I tried to use an Applied Micro Mustang as a desktop. And it was painful. " He also starts out with some of the problems. Even a decade on, he still has problems with missing codecs and client apps. The steps needed to work around them have changed, but the situation is not massively better. Last time, for instance, it was a problem that there was no Flash player; now, there’s no Arm Spotify client. In the second installment, Arm desktop: emulation he looks at the problems of using the latest x86-on-Arm emulation tools in trying to run x86 games on even a high-end Arm chip: "Test results were awful: Single core: 459 Multi core: 4110 That’s the level of an Intel Atom CPU from 2021." He concludes: “Let me be honest: without tweaking FEX-Emu config it was unplayable.” The third installment moves on to the issues of this server part: Arm desktop: so many cores, not enough speed. "Having 80 cores sounds nice, doesn’t it? But not so much during actual use… You see, building Fedora packages was flying by. With all cores in use, ccache buffers filling up (in case of rebuilds), and 128 GB of RAM in constant use, etc. "But at the same time, 100 percent load on all cores means you cannot listen to music on Spotify or watch online videos, etc. All that because the CPU cores are occupied by the build processes." His summary is short but not very sweet. The main issue: “The lack of single-thread speed.” And the bottom line: “To use a desktop system you do not need many cores. As long as they are fast.” In the final instalment, The end of the AArch64 desktop experiment, he looks at some of the issues in depth. He built his own custom specially patched kernels; he tried two different GPUs – both an AMD Radeon RX6700XT, a high-end card that was $479 when new in 2021, and then an Nvidia RTX 2060, a card that was $349 in 2019. With both cards, some apps wouldn’t run, due to missing OpenGL libraries, or they ran very badly: “Watching YouTube videos became impossible due to 720 out of 750 frames being dropped, etc.” He hasn’t pensioned off the machine: "The 'wooster' system stays powered on, churning through RISC-V package builds. It may be weak in single-thread, but it flies when it comes to multi-core load. " But this is the end for now: "As for the Ampere Altra, I am not planning to repeat this experiment. Another AArch64 desktop attempt would require a completely new hardware platform. And I have no plans to spend over twenty thousand PLN to buy an Nvidia DGX Spark system." (Twenty thousand Polish złoty was around $5,305, £4,020, or €4,660 at current exchange rates at the time of publication.) Our original plan when “hrw” started this series was to look into the lack of commodity-priced Arm64 hardware. At last year’s Ubuntu Summit, System76 presented its nearly ready COSMIC desktop, but it also demonstrated its 128-core Altra workstation, the formidable Thelio Astra. With half a terabyte of RAM and 40 TB of storage, it’s a snip at just over $6,000 (£4,600). We have to admit, after reading Hrw’s in-depth stories of what went wrong, we no longer covet one. Perhaps paying £168 for an 8 GB Pi 5 isn’t so bad after all. ®

Birgit Donker ten onrechte ontslagen bij het Nederlands Fotomuseum. Zij heeft daarom recht op een vergoeding van 400 duizend euro bruto.

VK: Birgit Donker ten onrechte ontslagen bij het Nederlands Fotomuseum. Zij heeft daarom recht op een vergoeding van 400 duizend euro bruto.

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Met hangen en wurgen toch gelukt: minister Sjoerdsma heeft zijn begroting door de Eerste Kamer

OM vraagt faillissement aan van cryptoplatform Knaken, duizenden klanten in onzekerheid

The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

Musical fruit or unsung hero? A beginner’s guide to cooking with beans

Long before becoming TikTok’s latest main character, food cultures around the world have been soaking and stewing beans to delicious effect. And yes, you can tone down the side-effects

For months, TikTok home cooks have been spilling the beans on the nutritional power of soaking and simmering pots of cannellini, borlotti and black beans. There are more than 13,000 TikTok videos under the hashtag #beantok, with cooks claiming the humble legumes have alleviated their anxiety, perimenopause and inflammation. Pair that with “fibremaxxing”, and the bean has found itself recast from back-of-the-pantry afterthought to wellness main character.

But for many cooks and chefs, none of this is new. Beans are native to the Americas and arrived in Europe by the 16th century, but they were so readily adopted into Mediterranean cooking that it’s now hard to imagine those cuisines without them. “The Tuscans are even known as ‘mangiafagioli’: bean eaters,” says food writer Emiko Davies, who points out that beans were once the everyday nutrition of a largely peasant population.

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Creative play and a curious cat – readers’ best photographs

Click here to submit a picture for publication in these online galleries and/or on the Guardian letters page

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Waldmüller: Landscapes review – the rule-breaking radical whose ‘delicate fingers’ drove bourgeois Austria wild

National Gallery, London
He painted leaves, grass and even bark with the precision of a chef applying a micro-garnish with tweezers. The result? Looking at his work feels a lot like eating your greens

Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller (1793-1865) is regarded as one of the most important figures in 19th-century Austrian art; an influential and admired teacher, and a somewhat radical figure regarding the established Viennese Academy. He worked during the Biedermeier movement which spanned the end of the Napoleonic wars until 1848 when various revolutions shook the ruling Habsburg empire and Austrian political elite. Biedermeier reflected the tastes and aspirations of a rising bourgeois society; terribly nice landscapes, genre scenes, floral and portrait pieces for the upwardly mobile drawing room. Within these genteel confines, Waldmüller intently focused on a more unflinching mode of depiction, concerned more with accuracy and integrity than the sentimentalising efforts of his peers, while also criticising the Academy’s teaching methods and eventually in 1857 even calling for the abolition of all academies.

If this collection of relatively small, minutely detailed landscapes is representative of an impassioned, radical painter tearing up the rule-book, it is far from obvious from their tightly controlled, rather unimposing visual appearance. Each shows a vista of a specific location – The Ruins of the Temple of Juno Lacinia near Agrigento (1846), View of the Dachstein from the Sophien-Doppelblick near Ischl (1835) – accompanied by captions which systematically list topographical details of note, followed by some light technical analysis: for the latter, “Waldmüller has distinguished the successive elements in the landscape with distinct changes in tonality, from the soft green of the valley to the blue-grey of the most distant mountains.” In the show’s only portrait, 1828’s Self Portrait as a Young Man, which incidentally dwarfs everything else here in scale, the caption draws attention to “his delicate fingers proclaiming his sensitivity and talent”: delicacy and sensitivity are the operative descriptors for the entire show.

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Volkomen, idiote, beslissing, in, hoger, beroep, kommavonnis, Telegraaf, over, FIO, en, Hamas

Compleet, bizar. Dat, is, het, arrest, van, het, Hof, in, Amsterdam, in, de, zaak, van, FIO, tegen, De, Telegraaf, vanwege, een, column, van, Nausicaa, Marbe, in, die, krant. Eerder, had, de, rechtbank, al, besloten, dat, je, in, dit, land, een, zin, die, gewoon, klopt, moet, rectificeren, omdat, mensen, er, misschien, iets, anders, in, lezen, en, het, Hof, schrijft, dat, nu, ook: "Het gelijk in het gevoerde (taalkundige) debat over het gebruik van de komma na ‘gelieerde organisaties’, waarop grief I van De Telegraaf betrekking heeft, is hierbij van ondergeschikte betekenis. Voldoende aannemelijk is dat een aanmerkelijk deel van het gemiddelde lezerspubliek, mede gelet op de verdere inhoud van de tekst, de passage ondanks het gebruik van een komma in plaats van een dubbele punt zo zal lezen dat FIO behoort tot ‘aan Hamas gelieerde organisaties’. Daarbij speelt mee dat de [naam 1] niet heeft vermeld om welke aan Hamas gelieerde organisaties het volgens haar zou gaan. Voorts wordt de kans dat de passage in de hierbedoelde zin wordt gelezen vergroot door de reeds genoemde volzin, die op zijn minst een ondersteuning van de doelstellingen van en sympathie met het gedachtegoed van Hamas impliceert." Oftewel, je, kunt, wel, taalkundig, gelijk, hebben, maar, als, clubjes, die, met, allerlei, andere, dubieuze, aan, Hamas, gelieerde, andere, clubjes, demonstreren, dan, mag, je, die clubjes, daar, in, een column, nota, bene, niet, mee, in, verband, brengen. De, Telegraaf, moet, rectificeren. Waanzinnig, punt.

Hoe, dan

kottke.org

Jason Kottke's weblog, home of fine hypertext products

Gah, this is another thing I’m completely fucking pissed...

Gah, this is another thing I’m completely fucking pissed about today: Supreme Court upholds bans on transgender athletes participating in women and girls’ sports.

Wat leverden de slavernijexcuses van Amsterdam op? ‘De zaadjes zijn geplant, maar kregen nog niet genoeg water’

Burgemeester Femke Halsema bood op 1 juli 2021 namens het stadsbestuur excuses aan voor het slavernijverleden van de hoofdstad. Vijf jaar na dato gelden de Amsterdamse excuses nog altijd als ‘historisch’, maar de beloofde herstelmaatregelen wachten nog op uitvoering.


Defensie blijft oefenen in natuurgebieden tijdens droogte, maar scherpt regels wel aan om risico’s ‘verder te beperken’

Geldt op een militair terrein een verhoogd risico op natuurbranden, dan hanteert het ministerie van Defensie voortaan strengere regels rondom militaire oefeningen die op dat…

Een hittegolf, noodhulp na aardbevingen en Trumps mislukte miljoenenrenovatie: dit is de maand juni in beeld

Dagelijks stromen duizenden foto’s uit de hele wereld onze beeldbanken binnen. Van gruwelijke actualiteit tot verstilde landschappen, van breaking news tot ogenschijnlijk kleine momenten. Elke maand selecteert de fotoredactie van NRC de foto’s die de meeste indruk maakten.

Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Stormloop op aansluitingen stroom, wachttijd neemt fors toe: 'Vervelend voor klanten'

Door nieuwe regels die op 1 juli ingaan, is een stormloop ontstaan op verzwaarde stroomaansluitingen. Het aantal aanvragen door particulieren en kleine ondernemers nam de laatste tijd fors toe en daarmee de wachttijden ook. "We begrijpen dat het voor klanten vervelend en onzeker is", zegt Thom Hofstede namens netbeheerder Stedin.

Japan - Nagoya

SergioQ79 - Osanpo Photographer - posted a photo:

Japan - Nagoya

A Nagoya piove forte, ma dentro Osu Kannon-dori la giornata continua. Lo shotengai tiene insieme negozi, ristoranti, supermercati e persone che attraversano il quartiere senza fermarsi troppo. La pioggia resta fuori solo in parte: entra nei riflessi, nei vestiti bagnati, nel passo piu rapido di chi cammina. In una giornata cosi si capisce bene a cosa serve una galleria commerciale giapponese: non solo comprare, ma continuare a vivere la citta anche quando il tempo cambia.

名古屋では強い雨が降っているが、大須観音通の中では一日がそのまま続いている。商店街には店、飲食店、スーパーが並び、人々はあまり立ち止まらずに通りを歩いていく。雨は完全に外にあるわけではない。床の反射、濡れた服、少し速くなる足取りの中に残っている。こういう日に、日本の商店街が何のためにあるのかがよくわかる。買い物の場所であるだけでなく、天気が変わっても街の生活を続けるための場所でもある。

It is raining heavily in Nagoya, but inside Osu Kannon-dori the day keeps moving. The shotengai brings together shops, restaurants, supermarkets, and people crossing the neighborhood without stopping for long. The rain stays outside only partly: it appears in the reflections, in wet clothes, in the quicker pace of people walking. On a day like this, it becomes clear what a Japanese shopping arcade is for: not only buying things, but keeping city life going when the weather changes.

Japan - Nagoya

SergioQ79 - Osanpo Photographer - has added a photo to the pool:

Japan - Nagoya

A Nagoya piove forte, ma dentro Osu Kannon-dori la giornata continua. Lo shotengai tiene insieme negozi, ristoranti, supermercati e persone che attraversano il quartiere senza fermarsi troppo. La pioggia resta fuori solo in parte: entra nei riflessi, nei vestiti bagnati, nel passo piu rapido di chi cammina. In una giornata cosi si capisce bene a cosa serve una galleria commerciale giapponese: non solo comprare, ma continuare a vivere la citta anche quando il tempo cambia.

名古屋では強い雨が降っているが、大須観音通の中では一日がそのまま続いている。商店街には店、飲食店、スーパーが並び、人々はあまり立ち止まらずに通りを歩いていく。雨は完全に外にあるわけではない。床の反射、濡れた服、少し速くなる足取りの中に残っている。こういう日に、日本の商店街が何のためにあるのかがよくわかる。買い物の場所であるだけでなく、天気が変わっても街の生活を続けるための場所でもある。

It is raining heavily in Nagoya, but inside Osu Kannon-dori the day keeps moving. The shotengai brings together shops, restaurants, supermarkets, and people crossing the neighborhood without stopping for long. The rain stays outside only partly: it appears in the reflections, in wet clothes, in the quicker pace of people walking. On a day like this, it becomes clear what a Japanese shopping arcade is for: not only buying things, but keeping city life going when the weather changes.

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Nieuwe mega‐studie: niet alleen zijn, maar eenzaamheid sloopt het brein”

Het nieuwe onderzoek laat zien dat vooral het gevoel van eenzaamheid het brein en de levensverwachting onder druk zet – niet simpelweg het feit dat iemand vaak alleen is

Wat hebben de onderzoekers gevonden?

Onder leiding van psycholoog Tomiko Yoneda (Universiteit van Californië, Davis) analyseerden onderzoekers gegevens van ruim 175.000 vooral middelbare en oudere volwassenen uit 18 landen in Noord‑Amerika en Europa. De deelnemers, gemiddeld 64,5 jaar oud, werden tot 26 jaar gevolgd in elf langlopende studies naar veroudering en cognitieve gezondheid. Daarbij werd onderscheid gemaakt tussen sociaal isolement – weinig contact met anderen – en eenzaamheid, het innerlijke gevoel dat het sociale leven tekortschiet.

Voor elke 10 procent toename in ervaren eenzaamheid steeg de kans op ernstige cognitieve stoornissen, zoals dementie, met ongeveer 8 à 9 procent. Tegelijk nam de kans op overlijden met circa 5 procent toe. Opvallend is dat deze verbanden bleven bestaan nadat was gecorrigeerd voor sociaal isolement, depressie, leeftijd, geslacht en opleiding.

Waarom telt gevoel zwaarder dan feit?

Sociaal isolement bleek op zichzelf slechts zwak samen te hangen met cognitieve achteruitgang en overlijden, en dat verband verwaterde grotendeels zodra eenzaamheid werd meegewogen. Eenzaamheid had juist het grootste effect in het vroege stadium van cognitieve problemen: mensen zonder beperkingen hadden bij meer eenzaamheid een duidelijk hogere kans om milde geheugen‑ en denkproblemen te ontwikkelen. Wie zich vaker eenzaam voelde, herstelde bovendien minder vaak van lichte cognitieve problemen naar een normale functie.

De auteurs benadrukken dat het om observationeel onderzoek gaat: er is een sterk verband, maar geen keihard bewijs dat eenzaamheid cognitieve achteruitgang veroorzaakt. Mogelijk versterken vroege geheugenproblemen op hun beurt het gevoel van eenzaamheid, waardoor een neerwaartse spiraal ontstaat.

Breder maatschappelijk signaal

De studie sluit aan bij waarschuwingen van de Amerikaanse Surgeon General, die eenzaamheid al bestempelde als een ‘epidemie’ met gezondheidsrisico’s die vergelijkbaar zijn met stevig roken. Artsen en beleidsmakers krijgen hiermee extra munitie om standaard te vragen naar hoe vaak patiënten zich eenzaam voelen, niet alleen naar het aantal sociale contacten. Want als het om het brein gaat, lijkt vooral de vraag te zijn: niet hoeveel mensen u ziet, maar hoe alleen u zich voelt.