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Meta Removes Controversial AI Feature On Instagram After Backlash

"Meta has axed a controversial feature that allowed users to modify photos from public Instagram accounts using AI," reports TechCrunch:

The feature, which wasn't designed to alert a user if their photos were used in this way, prompted immediate backlash... The company issued a blog post Friday announcing that it was removing the feature. Puck News founding partner Dylan Byers was the first to share the company's decision... Byers notes that the decision to do away with the feature came "amid scrutiny from users and talent agencies, including CAA."

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People Keep Sneaking Into an Empty IBM Campus - and Then Getting Arrested

Since February, New York state police have arrested 48 people for trespassing on a former IBM campus in Somers, New York, reports the Wall Street Journal. 30 of the arrests were teenagers.

The long-vacant site has become a magnet for so-called urban explorers, who prowl abandoned malls, hospitals, power plants, amusement parks, factories and any other disused structure they can breach... [I]t's been turbocharged by artsy videos on Instagram and TikTok that spur others to create their own posts, luring still more curiosity seekers... In Somers, social-media images of the old IBM campus — a sprawling, pyramid-studded 1980s complex designed by the late I.M. Pei's firm — show dystopian scenes: busted windows, tossed rooms and graffitied walls. But they also give eerie glimpses of conference rooms and cubicles unchanged since IBM left a decade ago, as if employees had fled the daily grind one day and never returned...

One man in his mid-20s faces felony charges; police allege he had a loaded 9mm gun and took a Sony camera and power strip among other souvenirs. Andrew Proto, a defense lawyer, said "a 15-second clip" isn't worth a criminal record... Proto said he has represented or advised several minors arrested on the campus. The Somers town court clerk said some defendants received a 6-month "adjournment in contemplation of dismissal," meaning charges will be dropped and their arrest sealed if they avoid trouble. Some explorers who have posted about the IBM site say they follow an observe-and-preserve ethos and reject vandalism. They say they're driven by curiosity, the thrill of roaming forbidden spaces and a zeal to document discoveries — and that they're careful and know their limits.

"It actually gives me hope when I hear that kids are out there getting into trouble," says Bradley Garrett, a cultural geographer and author of the book "Explore Everything: Place-Hacking the City," about his own urbex adventures. He sees urban exploration as "a gateway drug in a good way, sometimes, into intellectual curiosity about history and culture." But Garrett said popular spots can be "loved to death" online — and then shut down, looted or set ablaze.

"Trespassers were blamed for a March 30 fire, reports a local newspaper, "that damaged one of the buildings and required volunteer firefighters to spend three hours extinguishing the blaze."

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How the FSF Sysadmins are Blocking Botnets with reaction

For nearly two years the Free Software Foundation has been fighting web crawlers (including many aggressively scraping training data for AI models). A botnet controlling about five million IPs hit one system for six months in 2025. Their systems administrator wrote this week that they view these as distributed denial-of-service attacks.

How are they fighting back?


We noticed patterns in the scrapers that were abnormal, which gave us material for writing regular expressions. Searching for the regular expression then gave us a large lists of IP addresses. Looking up the origin of those IP addresses revealed that some of the crawlers were using botnets of residential IP addresses to scrape faster and avoid detection. We looked for what kinds of botnets might be generating the kind of traffic that we were seeing, and one that we suspected was called the "Vo1d" botnet, comprised of smart TVs running some sort of compromised app... We got confirmation that at least some of the botnet traffic hitting GNU Savannah was originating through the Vo1d/Popa botnet.



We placed our regular expressions in fail2ban, and found that we were hitting the maximum rules that could be added to UFW firewall rules on our systems which showed degradation around 65,000 rules... We learned about ipset and configured fail2ban to add IP addresses that it found to IP sets. Using ipset, we kept building larger IP sets and did not find instability with as large as five million rules...


We eventually found a promising project on Framasoft's forge Framagit called reaction written by ppom... After we ran into scaling issues with our initial implementation, we developed a much faster implementation where the reaction shutdown process would export the IP sets to disk and the reaction startup process would restore the IP sets. This allowed us to have nearly instantaneous restarts of the service to apply new rules. We published both of our configurations upstream to reaction's wiki so that everyone can benefit from it. reaction's getting started documentation now leads to the method that we proposed...


Many sysadmins know about fail2ban, but not enough people know about reaction. I am very grateful to ppom for the help they have provided and for the tremendous project they have released to the world with reaction. We have implemented other defenses as well, but reaction is doing the majority of the automated work keeping our sites online.

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Awaken by RAIN, Arose from the MUD

ajpscs posted a photo:

Awaken by RAIN, Arose from the MUD

LOTUS & WATER LILIES
ON MY KNEES, I CAN SEE FOREVER
© ajpscs

Water Lily, Ritsurin Koen Takamatsu

DanÅke Carlsson posted a photo:

Water Lily, Ritsurin Koen Takamatsu

But I Guess I Never Did

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

But I Guess I Never Did

Found Kodachrome Slide

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Kodachrome Slide

date stamped on slide September 1964

Found Kodachrome Slide

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Kodachrome Slide

Luis Tomasello, Chromoplastic Mural, 2011

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Luis Tomasello, Chromoplastic Mural, 2011

Dreadful Sorry Clementine

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Dreadful Sorry Clementine

Onrust rond aanmeldcentrum Ter Apel op eerste avond zonder hulporganisaties

Een dag nadat het Rode Kruis en Vluchtelingenwerk hun hulpverlening voor het aanmeldcentrum opschortten, waren er vechtpartijen en opstootjes tussen vluchtelingen.

Precies vier


Cinco


Woordzoeker


Cijferblok


Koprol


Sudoku


Aan Zet


Vorto


MetaFilter

The past 24 hours of MetaFilter

this wretched place where they never stop watching

Following a teensy data mixup, Flock cameras tracked automobile journalist Joel Feder for days and sent police to arrest him.
"The Plymouth Police Department had been tracking me for days using Flock license plate cameras, waiting for the right moment to strike, because they thought I'd stolen the Range Rover. And the reason I was ID'd as a dangerous car thief was a simple data error made 2,000 miles away in California[.]"


Bodycam footage of the incident [Instagram]. How to Fight Deployment of Flock and Other Mass Surveillance License Plate Readers in Your Community [ACLU] Get the Flock out. [ACLU] DeFlock.org - Find nearby Flock cameras.