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8 votes
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New fire maps put nearly four million Californians in hazardous zones
19 votes -
Denmark's state-run postal service is to end all letter deliveries at the end of 2025 – cites a 90% decline in letter volumes since the start of the century
37 votes -
A Reykjavík building that houses a penis museum and an H&M is also the virtual home to an array of perpetrators of identity theft, ransomware and disinformation
14 votes -
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport closed after a military helicopter collides with a landing regional jet
51 votes -
Some residents say they were in the dark as Los Angeles fires spread with no evacuation order
9 votes -
Did a private equity fire truck industry consolidation worsen the Los Angeles fires?
15 votes -
What's in the pink flame retardant planes are dropping on the LA fires?
11 votes -
Drone collides with firefighting aircraft over Palisades fire, in Los Angeles, Federal Aviation Administration says
23 votes -
Physical protective barriers have been built to hold back avalanches – but Svalbard has also turned to tech, with the help of a telecom firm and the University of Svalbard
4 votes -
Canada Post strike update: Postal employees back to work
17 votes -
Russia launches a rescue operation after a storm damages two oil tankers in the Kerch Strait
12 votes -
Missing camper found safe after more than five weeks in Canada's Northern Rockies
28 votes -
Copenhagen's once-industrial port has been planned to make everything, from schools and play areas to businesses and recreational spaces, accessible within five minutes
4 votes -
Domestic abuse experts to be embedded in emergency response control rooms in England and Wales
11 votes -
United States postal service debuts long-awaited new mail truck
88 votes -
Office retreat gone awry: Worker rescued after allegedly left stranded on Colorado mountain by colleagues
38 votes -
An American archaeologist has died after the replica boat she was sailing in capsized in rough seas during an expedition from the Faroe Islands to Norway
15 votes -
An American man has died in south Iceland after ice collapsed while he was on a group tour to a glacier
22 votes -
Try Guys try firefighting
6 votes -
Firefighters in Canada battle to save Jasper's buildings, infrastructure as wildfire engulfs town
23 votes -
Why is there a tiny bit of Italy inside Switzerland?
9 votes -
French post office releases scratch-and-sniff baguette stamp
27 votes -
Cyberattack forces major US health care network to divert ambulances from hospitals
17 votes -
The most powerful fire truck ever created
2 votes -
US senior homes refuse to pick up fallen residents, dial 911. ‘Why are they calling us?’
40 votes -
There used to be a people’s bank at the US Post Office
37 votes -
Long untouchable, fire departments are causing death and homelessness in American cities by advocating for bad policies
28 votes -
Why are there so many car washes?
24 votes -
How I write HTTP services in Go after 13 years
9 votes -
Fujitsu bugs that sent innocent people to prison were known “from the start” but concealed from lawyers and judges
104 votes -
Planes collide and catch fire at Japan’s busy Haneda airport, killing five. Hundreds evacuated safely.
26 votes -
Core Internet – what sites and services should we permanently preserve?
Looking ahead, the commodification and degradation of the Internet is continuing to take away digital resources that we have come to depend upon over the last 20 years. Whether it’s email or...
Looking ahead, the commodification and degradation of the Internet is continuing to take away digital resources that we have come to depend upon over the last 20 years. Whether it’s email or Amazon or YouTube, the decline of all our favorites has been well documented.
But we don’t want to live without these sites and services. Tildes itself is an attempt to preserve one such resource but in a better and more stable way. What other parts of the Internet deserve similar treatment?
Whether it’s open source eBay or community banking or nonprofit versions of Facebook… what would you choose and how would you go about preserving its character and making it workable in the long-term?
36 votes -
Join me on an exclusive tour of two remarkable fire stations in Columbus, Indiana
3 votes -
Net neutrality in the US is about more than just blocking and throttling, don't be fooled by attempts to limit the discussion to these concepts
27 votes -
Lord Sugar documents east London’s rubbish mountains
7 votes -
Coast Guard arrests a man trying to run a giant hamster wheel across the ocean
46 votes -
Concrete stamp from Swiss Post
11 votes -
Greece gripped by wildfires, national park threatened along with people and towns
26 votes -
Carbon removal should be a public good
30 votes -
How a five-person team saved a dying woman on a sailboat in the Pacific Ocean
22 votes -
When help shows up after a house fire, it might be gang members
19 votes -
It's a Baltic problem – objects are vanishing from historic wrecks as sport divers and criminal gangs loot well-preserved sunken ships
10 votes -
Australia's Royal Commission into the Robodebt Scheme has released its report. It describes the Scheme as "an illconceived, embryonic idea and rushed to Cabinet".
Royal Commission into the Robodebt Scheme https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Tabled_Documents/2743 Some summary quotes: From the Preface: It is remarkable how little interest there...
Royal Commission into the Robodebt Scheme
https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Tabled_Documents/2743
Some summary quotes:
From the Preface:
It is remarkable how little interest there seems to have been in ensuring the Scheme’s legality, how rushed its implementation was, how little thought was given to how it would affect welfare recipients and the lengths to which public servants were prepared to go to oblige ministers on a quest for savings. Truly dismaying was the revelation of dishonesty and collusion to prevent the Scheme’s lack of legal foundation coming to light. Equally disheartening was the ineffectiveness of what one might consider institutional checks and balances – the Commonwealth Ombudsman’s Office, the Office of Legal Services Coordination, the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner and the Administrative Appeals Tribunal – in presenting any hindrance to the Scheme’s continuance.
From the Conclusion:
The report paints a picture of how the Robodebt Scheme (the Scheme) was put together on an illconceived, embryonic idea and rushed to Cabinet. If ever there were a case of giving an unproportion’d thought his act, this was it.
The application of [public interest] immunity has also limited the Commission’s ability to reveal the entirety of the documentation concerning how the original proposal which became Robodebt, was passed and what was put to Cabinet thereafter. The salient points have been able to be made, but large parts of the relevant ministerial briefs, materials put before Cabinet and Cabinet minutes themselves have not been able to be revealed.
One of the questions in the Terms of Reference is when the Australian Government knew or ought to have known that debts were not, or may not have been, validly raised. [...] Some DHS senior executives always had that knowledge; some DSS senior executives must have suspected it, at least by 2016. As to members of the Government, one Minister, Mr Morrison, took the proposal to Cabinet, knowing that it involved income averaging and that his own Department had indicated that it would require legislative change, but on the basis of the contrary indication in the NPP checklist, proceeded without enquiring as to how the change had come about.
And... this ticking time-bomb from the covering letter:
I have provided to you an additional chapter of the report which has not been included in the bound report and is sealed. It recommends the referral of individuals for civil action or criminal prosecution. I recommend that this additional chapter remain sealed and not be tabled with the rest of the report so as not to prejudice the conduct of any future civil action or criminal prosecution.
Some news articles:
20 votes -
Freedom House Ambulance Service - a history of the USA's first paramedics
11 votes -
Smoke will keep pouring into the US as long as fires are burning in Canada. Here’s why they aren’t being put out.
25 votes -
British born entrepreneur and inventor Richard Browning is in Norway to test his new jet suit in the country's rough and mountainous terrain
6 votes -
US Navy 'knew about Titanic sub implosion days ago'
64 votes -
US Coast Guard to have a press conference to discuss the apparent debris field of uncertain origin found near the Titanic at 3pm EST
42 votes -
Swedish electric self-driving truck company Einride has partnered with Scandinavia's leading postal service PostNord in Norway
7 votes