I have some software running (behind cloudflare and results tailored to Brazil on SearXNG because of the brazilian IP):

Feel free to use on Libredirect or directly!

  • 66 Posts
  • 75 Comments
Joined 5 months ago
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Cake day: February 9th, 2026

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  • continuing the article

    The way out of liberalism’s crisis is not to abandon liberalism. It is to recover its radical spirit. Liberals should once again be the people who hate monopoly, inherited advantage, closed systems and rigged games. They should champion real competition, real meritocracy and real equality of opportunity. They should take on corporate power when it crushes markets, government power when it protects insiders and cultural power when it creates bureaucracies that substitute group identity for individual dignity.

    As Wooldridge argues, the center cannot be merely a midpoint between left and right. It has to be revolutionary in its own way. Liberalism’s great promise was never that people would be left alone to decay in freedom. It was that people would be given the tools, rules and responsibilities necessary to flourish.

    Liberalism began as a revolt against encrusted power. It will survive only if it becomes one again.

    Edit: Basically, the fight against everyone else is to promote meritocracy, markets and competition. Basically the same talk 19th century liberalism did.


  • the article

    Two recent events, on opposite sides of the Atlantic, point to the same problem. In Britain, the man widely expected to replace the stately Keir Starmer as prime minister is Andy Burnham, who touts “business-friendly socialism” as his credo. In New York, Democratic primary elections produced striking victories for democratic socialists, suggesting that the insurgent left has found a way to turn protest into power.

    First, a caveat: The left is not marching uniformly toward socialism. Many primaries outside New York City were won by moderate Democrats. In a swing district just outside the city, combat veteran Cait Conley won handily. But a certain kind of liberalism is losing energy, confidence and connection to the people it claims to represent.

    In Adrian Wooldridge’s new book “The Revolutionary Center,” a brilliant intellectual history of liberalism from the Enlightenment to the present, Wooldridge reminds us that liberalism was once the most radical force in politics. It attacked inherited privilege, monopoly power, censorship, aristocracy, clerical authority and closed guilds. It was not the ideology of the establishment. It was the battering ram against the establishment.

    Today, liberalism has become identified with power — great universities, foundations, media organizations, corporations and bureaucracies. Wooldridge argues that this has produced two deep failures.

    The first is passivity. Modern liberalism, certainly since the 1990s, has celebrated free markets and free people. In practice, that has meant deregulating both economic life and personal life, then treating the consequences as the price of freedom. In markets, this has allowed corporate consolidation and inequality to run wild. In personal life, liberals have become reluctant to say that certain behaviors are socially destructive.

    The result is liberal fatalism. People camp out on city streets, addicted and mentally ill, and liberals often describe this as a housing problem. Millions suffer from obesity-related illnesses, and liberals are more comfortable blaming “food deserts” than taking on the companies that hook their customers on processed food. Social media companies do the same with their consumers’ attention.

    Wooldridge calls for a revival of liberal paternalism. The phrase grates on modern ears. But a liberal society should celebrate individual rights — and also demand individual responsibility. It should understand that freedom can be destroyed not only by the state but also by addiction, monopoly, crime, ignorance and dependence.

    This is not an argument for socialism. It is an argument for truer liberalism. Liberals should love markets not because they allow the strong to dominate or inequality to grow, but because genuine competition allows the little guy to challenge the strong. A healthy market is not one in which four companies quietly divide up an industry and use lawyers, lobbyists and algorithms to keep challengers out. It is one in which new entrants can rise, consumers can choose, workers can move and incumbents can fail.

    The second failure Wooldridge identifies is more uncomfortable because it concerns liberals’ own status. Liberalism believes in meritocracy. Historically, this was one of its noblest causes. It argued that people should rise by talent and effort, not birth, race, caste or class. But over time, the meritocratic elite has hardened into its own aristocracy.

    Elite liberals support social justice, but do little to dismantle legacy admissions. They want the poor to move up the ladder, but not if that requires building more housing in the leafy neighborhoods where they live. They praise individual merit, but have created a vast diversity bureaucracy that too often judges people by group identity rather than individual character.

    Nowhere is this clearer than in K-12 education. A genuinely liberal politics would start with the child. It would attack any institution — union, bureaucracy, school board, university department — that feeds its own power while failing America’s children.

    This is where democratic socialists and right-wing populists gain their power. They understand that people want someone to fight for them. They may offer bad answers — the left with class warfare, protectionism and state control, and the right with protectionism, ethnic resentment and racial nostalgia. But they sound like outsiders willing to take on entrenched privilege and offer protection in a world where freedom seems to mean chaos.


  • Bypass paywalls clean

    the article

    U.S. Military Strikes Missile and Drone Sites in Iran

    U.S. Central Command said the attacks were in retaliation for an Iranian drone strike on a commercial vessel in the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday. They concluded after about 90 minutes, according to a U.S. official.

    The U.S. military struck Iranian missile and drone sites on Friday night in retaliation for an Iranian attack on a cargo ship in the Strait of Hormuz a day earlier, jolting the fragile cease-fire between the countries.

    Hours before the U.S. strikes, President Trump called the Iranian action a “foolish violation” of the cease-fire agreement, which had aimed to end a war that had roiled world markets, reignited the conflict between Israel and Iran’s ally Hezbollah, and shaken the broader Middle East. The preliminary deal left the future of the strait unresolved, with U.S. officials declaring the critical waterway would once again be a free point of transit and Iran asserting its control there.

    The U.S. strikes on Friday targeting Iranian missile and drone targets concluded after about 90 minutes, a U.S. official said, and included strikes by American fighter jets against four Iranian sites along the Strait of Hormuz and on Qeshm Island, the official said.

    The cease-fire agreement between the countries was signed just 11 days ago and has led to the start of new negotiations over the strait, Iran’s nuclear program and other issues. Before the United States and Iran reached the preliminary deal, their forces would sometimes launch limited strikes but hold back from renewing all-out combat operations.

    The latest U.S. strikes on Friday targeted Iranian missile and drone storage locations and coastal radar sites, U.S. Central Command said in a statement, calling it a “powerful response” to the Iranian attack on Thursday. The extent of damage from the new U.S. strikes was not immediately clear.

    Mr. Trump said earlier on social media that Iran launched at least four one-way-attack drones on Thursday, one of which hit the upper deck “of a large and very expensive Cargo Carrying Ship,” adding that the United States had knocked down three other drones. He added that the ship, though damaged, was able to continue on its way.

    Iran’s strike on the vessel, the Ever Lovely, a container ship that was passing near the Omani side of the strait, appeared to be the first known Iranian attack on a commercial vessel since the signing of a preliminary peace agreement between Tehran and Washington last week. It laid bare the challenges to restoring prewar levels of traffic through the strait, a crucial conduit for oil and gas shipping.

    The attack prompted the International Maritime Organization, a U.N. agency, to suspend an effort to help hundreds of stranded vessels leave the Persian Gulf. At least two tankers turned around after Iran’s warning earlier that day, according to Lloyd’s List Intelligence, while the number of ships passing through the strait fell to 54 on Thursday from 73 a day earlier, according to Kpler, a maritime data firm.








  • I’m going to sound crazy (because I am), but I think counciousness can only be created by a specific kind of cognitive process, that the “brain” is automatically connected and receive direct information from it’s behaviour.

    Like, if a cognitive process, imagine an undescribed algorithm, receives immediate information from it’s behaviour and automatically acts upon itself, changing the algorithm itself, so it can relate cause and effect, being the only basic form of interaction that can produce this cognitive process, the basis for any higher function as “I (internal) interact (made something) with the world (the outside reaction to what I made)”.

    This would mean that counciousness would need this step, not that this step would necessarily create counciousness.

    These LLMs are prebaked dictionaries in this form of view.







  • In your scenario, I would prefer to tunnel to the outside, as it could be risky to just open a port on your router and open a port on your computer. In this case, pointing the IP to a vps that your PC tunnels to or putting the record in cloudflares DNS, that way no automatic port searcher will try to nuke your network. There is dynamic DNS too.

    There is cloudflare and other options too.

    Edit: I do this with cloudflare, but privacy is very much not given with them.





  • If you would accept custom roms in general, there are GSI ROMs available that you could try, it works (sometimes with some problems, it’s good to read a little bit about GSI ROMs) even if there isn’t a official ROM built specifically for your device.

    Edit: It seems RestlessOS and VoltageOS have some unofficial builds in there, I heard that they’re trying to be grapheneos, but for every phone (and because of this, some less security features)





  • My /etc/security/limits.conf is like this (everything is commented, just that two lines aren’t):

    #<domain>      <type>  <item>         <value>
    #
    
    #*               soft    core            0
    #*               hard    rss             10000
    #@student        hard    nproc           20
    #@faculty        soft    nproc           20
    #@faculty        hard    nproc           50
    #ftp             hard    nproc           0
    #@student        -       maxlogins       4
    
    # End of file
    * soft nofile 65535
    * hard nofile 65535
    

    Idk if you have anything else in that file, but it could be good to try with only that two uncommented lines and then reboot the computer.