Rijnmond - Nieuws

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

Cocaïnehandel met bevroren vissen levert voormalig voetbaltalent drie jaar cel op

De vondst van 160 kilogram cocaïne bij een autopoetsbedrijf in de Spaanse Polder in Rotterdam zorgt anderhalf jaar geleden voor veel ophef. Immers, brandweerlieden ontdekken dat het zaakje stinkt als ze de handel vinden na een melding over een vieze lucht. Korte tijd later staat de straat vol zwaarbewapende politiemensen. Maandag zijn de verdachten tot celstraffen veroordeeld.

Brand bij supermarkt, magazijn vol rook

Bij de Dirk aan de Damstraat in Spijkenisse heeft maandagmiddag brand gewoed. Er zouden flinke vlammen zijn geslagen uit enkele afvalkarren. De brandweer had het vuur snel onder controle. Het magazijn van de supermarkt kwam wel vol met rook te staan.

thexiffy

Last.fm last recent tracks from thexiffy.

Living Colour - Leave It Alone

Living Colour

Amsterdam Klezband - Matrosi

Amsterdam Klezband

Hardtrack - DJ Bill

Hardtrack

Project Pitchfork - Steelrose (Talla 2XLC Remix)

Project Pitchfork

Munly & the Lee Lewis Harlots - Of Silas Fauntleroys Willingne

Munly & the Lee Lewis Harlots

Moby - Fireworks

Moby

404 Media

404 Media is an independent media company founded by technology journalists Jason Koebler, Emanuel Maiberg, Samantha Cole, and Joseph Cox.

With Iran War, Kalshi and Polymarket Bet That the Depravity Economy Has No Bottom

With Iran War, Kalshi and Polymarket Bet That the Depravity Economy Has No Bottom

The main bet on the front page of Polymarket right now is “Will the Iranian regime fall by June 30?” The site has this at a 41 percent chance of happening as I write this. 

On Polymarket, more than $5 million has been spent gambling on this question. On Kalshi, a competing prediction market where users can bet on almost anything, $54 million was spent on “Ali Khamenei out as Supreme Leader?,” a bet whose results somehow ended up ambiguous even after Khamenei’s assassination. 

In a series of tweets over the weekend, Kalshi’s CEO and founder Tarek Mansour repeatedly twisted himself into pretzels attempting to explain how the absurd, grotesque exercise of allowing people to bet on politics, geopolitics, and world events is not supposed to allow people to profit from death. 

“We don’t list markets directly tied to death. When there are markets where potential outcomes involve death, we design the rules to prevent people from profiting from death,” he wrote. He then posted the underlying rules of the bet, which read “If <leader> leaves solely because they have died, the associated market will resolve and the Exchange will determine the payouts to the holders of long and short positions based upon the last traded price (prior to the death).” 

With Iran War, Kalshi and Polymarket Bet That the Depravity Economy Has No Bottom

That we are discussing the ins-and-outs of which random gamblers get paid out during an illegal war in which already hundreds of school children have been bombed to death feels like the type of grotesque sideshow that is only possible because the U.S. government is only interested in regulating its perceived political enemies, and which only feels possible because much of the American economy feels held together by cope and the gobs of money being thrown into AI, data centers, and gambling. All of this is part of the perverse Silicon Valley, AI, crypto, and X-adjacent hustlebro gambling economy, which was legalized by companies like DraftKings and FanDuel, who spent eyewatering sums lobbying states to allow their gambling apps, and has been “legitimized” by sports leagues who wanted to print money and media companies desperate for the advertising dollars that came from gambling and has turned this all into a massive industrial complex that is not-so-slowly bankrupting a generation of underemployed people addicted to gambling. Polymarket and Kalshi took the DraftKings and FanDuel model and let people bet on basically anything, so now you can bet on which countries Iran will launch missiles against on the same app you bet on the Nuggets/Jazz game or the winner of the Best Picture Academy Award. The new model is so good at parting people from their money that DraftKings and FanDuel themselves have been anxious to get into prediction markets.

With Iran War, Kalshi and Polymarket Bet That the Depravity Economy Has No Bottom

This is how we end up with extremely underregulated companies more or less making up rules on the fly as they hop from crisis to crisis trying to determine the nature of reality, such as whether a suit is a suit or whether a dead guy is still in charge of the government, with each disputed bet having millions of dollars on the line. Both Polymarket and Kalshi have decided to go with the line that letting people bet on war, politics, and the general nature of reality will not distort reality through the insider trading we’ve already repeatedly seen, but will somehow improve public trust in the reporting of news. Polymarket has added a note to all Iran-focused bets that says “The promise of prediction markets is to harness the wisdom of the crowd to create accurate, unbiased forecasts for the most important events to society. That ability is particularly invaluable in gut-wrenching times like today. After discussing with those directly affected by the attacks, who had dozens of questions, we realized that prediction markets could give them the answers they needed in ways TV news and X could not.” 

This is, conveniently, a stance that allows Polymarket to continue to profit from death and war, and allows its customers to continue to bet on it. Polymarket’s X feed is kind of like a fucked up newswire service for degenerates, its tweets today including things like ““BREAKING: 41% of all scheduled flights to the Middle East have been cancelled today” and “NEW POLYMARKET: New Supreme Leader of Iran by…?” Polymarket’s recent integration with Substack means, I guess, that we’re about to see a generation of people who “get their news from gambling apps,” which is sure to lead to a healthy society. A recent interview on Polymarket’s own Substack valorizes a gambler named “Betwick” who lost 70 percent of his money largely because he “lost quite a bit on ‘Israel strikes Iran’ at the last minute, where it looked like they were going to negotiate for a few more days and Israel did the surprise attack” but was confident he could rebuild it by continuing to bet on various Iran war scenarios.

That these gambling apps will do anything to restore trust in how society operates or will in any way make it healthier is obviously, blatantly untrue. We have seen people manipulate maps to win Polymarket bets on the war in Ukraine, what appeared to be obvious insider trading on the U.S. attack on Venezuela, and numerous people banned or fired for insider trading on companies that they work at. Already there are allegations from lawmakers that there has been insider trading on the Iran markets. We have seen early research, meanwhile, that shows the resurgent gambling industry is sucking in huge numbers of young people and that people lose their money faster on these prediction markets than they do on sports gambling platforms. Missed out on Bitcoin? Missed out on GameStop? Missed out on NFTs and memecoins and dropshipping? Polymarket and Kalshi are here now. 

The obvious farce of all of this is that Kalshi’s line that “we design the rules to prevent people from profiting from death” is obviously untrue on its face, it’s just that the company would rather let you bet on the deaths and suffering of civilians rather than dictators and presidents. Betting that Khamenei would stay in power is an explicit bet that he would be allowed to continue silencing dissent and killing those who oppose him; betting that he would be deposed is an explicit bet on what has already become a very deadly, illegal regional war. Even bets on things like “Will Iran close the Strait of Hormuz” and gas prices are explicit bets on the escalation or deescalation of this war and thus a bet on people's deaths, which is obvious on its face but becomes more clear as you dig into the “rules” of any given bet.  

Winning the Khamenei bet required any number of things that definitely would involve the deaths of many people and “requires a broad consensus of reporting indicating that core structures of the Islamic Republic (e.g. the office of the Supreme Leader, the Guardian Council, IRGC control under clerical authority) have been dissolved, incapacitated, or replaced by a fundamentally different governing system or otherwise lost de facto power over a majority of the population of Iran. This could occur via revolution, civil war, military coup, or voluntary abdication, but only qualifies if the Islamic Republic no longer exercises sovereign power. Routine political events such as elections, reforms, or leadership succession do not qualify. Internal coups or power shifts that preserve the Islamic Republic’s core structures also do not qualify. Only a clear break in continuity—such as a new provisional government, revolutionary council, or constitution replacing the Islamic Republic will qualify.”

With Iran War, Kalshi and Polymarket Bet That the Depravity Economy Has No Bottom

Meanwhile, over on Polymarket, “Will Iran strike a Gulf State on March 2” requires the definition of a “qualifying strike,” which is “the use of aerial bombs, drones, or missiles (including cruise or ballistic missiles) launched by Iranian military forces that impact a gulf state's ground territory.” In case you’re wondering, “Missiles or drones that are intercepted and surface-to-air missile strikes will not be sufficient for a ‘Yes’ resolution, regardless of whether they land on a gulf state's territory or cause damage. Actions such as artillery fire, small arms fire, FPV or ATGM strikes, ground incursions, naval shelling, cyberattacks, or other operations conducted by Iranian ground operatives will not qualify.”

There is no chance any of this ends well. It’s already a disaster. Wanna bet?


Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Trump: dit was onze laatste kans om Iraans kernwapen te voorkomen

WASHINGTON (ANP) - Volgens de Amerikaanse president Donald Trump was afgelopen weekend "de laatste goede kans" om Iran aan te vallen en te voorkomen dat het land een kernwapen zou ontwikkelen. Hij stelde in een korte update over Iran dat de operatie "ver voor op schema" ligt.

Trump sprak bij een ceremonie voor veteranen die een hoge onderscheiding kregen, maar nam ook kort de tijd om het over de oorlog in Iran te hebben. Hij somde nog eens de doelen op van luchtaanvallen in Iran: het vernietigen van Irans raketprogramma en de marine en voorkomen dat het land een kernwapen kan krijgen.

De president zei eerder dat hij dacht dat de oorlog vier tot vijf weken kon duren. Hoewel de operatie volgens hem voorloopt op schema, verklaarde hij dat de Amerikanen ook in staat zijn om langer door te gaan met de aanvallen op Iran.

Vorige zomer voerden de VS en Israël ook al aanvallen uit op Irans nucleaire faciliteiten. Trump beweerde toen dat Irans kernprogramma daardoor "decennia" was teruggeworpen.


Advocaten mogen weer met laptop en telefoon gevangenis bezoeken

DEN HAAG (ANP) - Advocaten mogen weer een laptop en een mobiele telefoon meenemen als ze cliënten in de gevangenis opzoeken. Dat meldt de Nederlandse Orde van Advocaten (NOvA) na overleg met de Dienst Justitiële Inrichtingen (DJI). Het nieuwe toegangsbeleid treedt naar verwachting na de zomer in werking.

Vorig jaar zomer kondigde DJI aan het toegangsbeleid in gevangenissen aan te scherpen. Het verbieden van laptops en telefoons zou volgens DJI voortgezet crimineel handelen en smokkelwaar in gevangenissen moeten tegengaan. De advocatenorde noemde dit onwerkbaar.

Advocaten hebben een laptop of tablet nodig om het digitale dossier met hun cliënten te kunnen bespreken. Hun mobiele telefoon gebruiken ze om in te kunnen loggen op de systemen.

Het toegangsbeleid in de Extra Beveiligde Inrichting (EBI) in Vught blijft onveranderd. Daar mogen advocaten alleen gebruikmaken van DJI-laptops in combinatie met een usb-stick. DJI ziet volgens NOvA af van het voornemen om dit strenge toegangsbeleid ook door te voeren bij de vier Afdelingen Intensief Toezicht (AIT).


ABN AMRO mag NIBC overnemen, zegt toezichthouder ACM

DEN HAAG (ANP) - ABN AMRO mag zijn kleinere branchegenoot NIBC Bank overnemen, heeft de Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) besloten. Volgens de mededingingswaakhond zijn er geen aanwijzingen dat deze deal de concurrentie in het Nederlandse bankenlandschap beperkt.

Het gaat om een van de grootste overnames in jaren in de Nederlandse bankensector. De geschatte overnameprijs bedraagt zo'n 960 miljoen euro.

De ACM kwam nog geen twee jaar geleden met een rapport dat er te weinig concurrentie zou zijn tussen banken in Nederland. Volgens de ACM was dat een belangrijke oorzaak van de lage spaarrente voor consumenten. De grootbanken zouden onvoldoende concurrentiedruk voelen om hun spaarrente te verhogen.

Nu slokt zo'n grootbank een andere bank op. De ACM stelt echter dat NIBC maar een relatief kleine speler is, die bedrijfsfinancieringen verstrekt en hypotheek- en spaarproducten aanbiedt aan consumenten. Dat betekent dat het marktaandeel van grootbank ABN AMRO na de overname op al deze markten maar beperkt toeneemt, aldus de toezichthouder.


The Guardian

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

Pressure on Carney to address Indian interference allegations after Modi meeting

Canadian prime minister and Indian prime minister mostly discussed trade during Carney’s visit to India

Mark Carney is under mounting pressure to address whether he believes Indian interference in Canada remains a threat after he met with Narendra Modi, India’s prime minister, whose government is accused of orchestrating the killing a Canadian citizen.

“We are one family,” the Canadian prime minister said from New Delhi on Monday, capping a four day trade-focused trip meant reset relations with the world’s most populous nation.

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Andreas Gohr: Weblog [splitbrain.org]

Weblog on technology, programming and personal stuff by Andreas Gohr.

Old Game, New Clothes

Old Game, New Clothes

ZigNum

Back in university in 2003 we had to do a group project. I don't remember which course it was, but the assignment was pretty open. Basically as long as you coded something, you passed.

I had just switched from my trusty Palm Tungsten E2 PDA to a Linux based Sharp Zaurus and I was missing a little puzzle game I enjoyed playing on the Palm. So my friend Frank and I decided to implement our own version.

The Zaurus used QT as the graphics framework so we made it in C++ and QT. It was a fun project and it not only worked on the Zaurus but also on desktop. Frank even managed to compile it for Windows.

The time of PDAs was soon over and the age of the smartphone had begun. From time to time I thought about creating an Android app of that game. Unfortunately I had lost the original source code, so I asked Frank if he still had it and luckily he found it on an old disk.

Good thing he sent the code to my gmail account where it got archived forever. Because that was back in 2011 and I never came around to actually make that app.

But recently I remembered. And since we're living in the future (a much shittier version of the future than I had hoped, but the future nonetheless) porting code is relatively simple now.

So I spent an afternoon with Claude Code, having it analyze the original code, come up with some initial requirements and a final implementation plan. Then I let it run and it basically one-shot a working implementation :-O.

There are many valid criticisms on LLMs and their billionaire owners. But that LLMs don't work isn't one of them…

I iterated a bit on the implementation and now have a modern version of the old game and it even includes a network mode.

The game uses modern ES6 JavaScript modules and web components, the networking is based on WebRTC (using PeerJS), it has an automatic dark mode, you can install it as an offline app thanks to PWA technology and does not even need a build system. Another tiny part of the future that doesn't suck.

If you want to give it a try, here you go: ZigNum. I find the computer quite difficult to beat – despite the rather naive “AI” approach we picked back in 2003. But maybe I'm just rusty.

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Repose in a Park

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Repose in a Park

Found Slide

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The past 24 hours of MetaFilter

Microsoft's brand image might already be at an all-time low...

Microsoft gets tired of "Microslop," bans the word on its Discord, then locks the server after backlash.

Double Dose from Harper's on Our Clown Overlords

Two real bangers in this month's issue taking us from the wave of barely-parseable Zoomers hitting Silicon Valley to the movement to reindustrialize the United States (with tech).

The first of these at least has been doing the rounds on the various short-form sites. We start with Sam Kriss (I think the most recent previously) on the newest kind of person pursued by the app sector (ungated): The future will belong to people with a very specific combination of personality traits and psychosexual neuroses. An AI might be able to code faster than you, but there is one advantage that humans still have. It's called agency, or being highly agentic. The highly agentic are people who just do things. They don't timidly wait for permission or consensus; they drive like bulldozers through whatever's in their way. When they see something that could be changed in the world, they don't write a lengthy critique—they change it. AIs are not capable of accessing whatever unpleasant childhood experience it is that gives you this hunger. Agency is now the most valuable commodity in Silicon Valley. In tech interviews, it's common for candidates to be asked whether they're "mimetic" or "agentic." You do not want to say mimetic. Once, San Francisco drew in runaway children, artists, and freaks; today it's an enormous magnet for highly agentic young men. I set out to meet them. The piece deals in good part (though not exclusively) with Roy Lee, the kid who told New York Mag (previously) he was proud to have cheated his way into, and out of, Columbia, where his only goal was to find a startup partner (he did). And then we have Maddy Crowell on the folks who are going to reindustrialize America with high-tech AI-powered factories (ungated) (the joke being that they won't and they'll be making drones): The techno-industrialists have a different plan to save America. As they see it, what we need is advanced manufacturing. For too long, they say, tech engineers have been fooling around with intangible things: software, blockchain, crypto, AI. Meanwhile, China, the world's manufacturing powerhouse, is churning out roughly eighty-five thousand cars a day; the United States can scarcely produce a third of that number. Silicon Valley is bloated with startups, but too few of their products are concrete. The techno-industrialists believe that America needs to apply modern computing capabilities to industrial production. They believe that technology has drifted too far into the invisible realm of bits or into the digital cloud. They are tired of the coastal ethos of "tech for tech's sake." And they've attracted some very powerful backers in the newly allied worlds of tech and American politics, among them the vice president and the secretary of defense. "The West once held its own destiny in a firm grip," reads the New Industrial Corporation's mission statement. "We can all feel it. A supercycle is groaning to a halt. . . . The known world order is becoming disordered. The 'end of history' is ending."

Omstreden pro-Palestijnse ex-Radbouddocent toch niet welkom op VU Brussel

De voorgenomen aanstelling van de Britse docent Harry Pettit aan de Vrije Universiteit Brussel gaat niet door. Volgens het universiteitsbestuur heeft hij in strijd met de gedragsregels gehandeld door uitlatingen op X. Eerder brak de Radboud Universiteit al met hem.

‘Aanval op Iran mag alleen bij onmiddellijke dreiging. Dat was heel duidelijk niet het geval’

De Amerikaans-Israëlische aanval op Iran is in strijd met het internationaal recht. „Het is zorgwekkend dat zo veel wereldleiders begrip tonen voor de aanval”, zegt Marieke de Hoon, universitair hoofddocent internationaal strafrecht aan de UvA.