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Today — 19 July 2025Main stream

Trump sues Murdoch and Wall Street Journal over Epstein article

19 July 2025 at 10:47
Getty Images Trump gives a thumbs up at a bill signing ceremony on Friday. Getty Images

President Donald Trump has filed a lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal's parent company, its owner and two reporters, over a report claiming Trump wrote a "bawdy" personal note to paedophile Jeffrey Epstein in 2003.

The lawsuit, filed in Miami, names Dow Jones, News Corp and conservative media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, claiming the paper slandered him and violated libel laws.

Earlier, Trump had threatened that he would force Murdoch "to testify in my lawsuit against him and his 'pile of garbage' newspaper".

Trump says the note, which the paper reported he'd sent for Epstein's 50th birthday, is "fake". It comes amid a backlash from his supporters over his handling of the Epstein case files.

Trump acknowledged that he and members of his staff attempted to halt publication of the story. He said the newspaper and Murdoch "were warned directly" they would be sued if they printed the article, describing it as "false, malicious, and defamatory".

The lawsuit also names the two reporters who wrote the story, Khadeeja Safdar and Joseph Palazzolo.

Earlier on Friday, Trump took to his Truth Social platform, writing: "I look forward to getting Rupert Murdoch to testify in my lawsuit against him and his 'pile of garbage' newspaper, the WSJ. That will be an interesting experience!!!"

According to the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), a letter bearing Trump's name "contained several lines of typewritten text framed by the outline of a naked woman, which appears to be hand-drawn with a heavy marker".

"Inside the outline of the naked woman was a typewritten note styled as an imaginary conversation between Trump and Epstein, written in the third person," the paper reports.

It reportedly contains a joking reference that "Enigmas never age" and allegedly ends with the words: "A pal is a wonderful thing. Happy Birthday – and may every day be another wonderful secret."

Trump denied writing the note after the article was published on Thursday, posting: "These are not my words, not the way I talk. Also, I don't draw pictures."

On Friday, Trump declined to answer reporters' questions about his relationship with Epstein, and why he had not ordered the release of more documents.

Instead, he asked the Attorney General to produce documents related to secretive grand jury testimony, which could prove to be a lengthy court process. It's unclear when or if those documents will be released, or if they contain the details Trump's supporters have been demanding be released publicly.

Trump's order concerning grand jury testimony came after days of sustained pressure from some of his most loyal supporters demanding further disclosures in the Epstein case.

Some Trump loyalists have called for Attorney General Pam Bondi to resign after she reversed course on releasing certain documents related to Epstein.

In February, Bondi said that a "client list" belonging to Epstein was "sitting on my desk right now". Then last week, her office announced that there is no such "client list".

Chad Bianco, a Republican sheriff running for California governor, told BBC News that Trump's handling of the Epstein files was "not what I was expecting" and that "millions" of his followers are disappointed.

"We feel like we're being talked down to like stupid children."

Trump and Murdoch have a relationship that goes back decades.

The 94-year-old media tycoon's media empire, which includes Fox News, is often credited with helping propel Trump to the White House.

But the two grew more distant over the years and their relationship started to collapse following Trump's loss at the ballot box in 2020 to Joe Biden.

"We want to make Trump a non-person," Murdoch wrote in an email that emerged during court battles over Fox's role spreading misinformation in the 2020 election.

Trump's more recent victory in 2024 appeared to bring the two together again. During a February visit to the White House, Trump referred to Murdoch as "a class by himself" and "an amazing guy".

On Sunday, the two men were pictured together attending the Fifa World Cup in New Jersey.

Attorney General Bondi was also seen watching the match from the president's private box.

Meanwhile, members of Congress are pushing to pass a "discharge petition" that would force Bondi to "make publicly available in a searchable and downloadable format all unclassified records, documents, communications, and investigative materials in the possession of the Department of Justice, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation and United States Attorneys' Offices" relating to Epstein.

The effort has brought together some of Congress's fiercest opponents, including Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene and Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez who are both signed on as supporters.

'The village will die' - Italy looks for answers to decline in number of babies

19 July 2025 at 13:01
BBC View of Fregona from mayor's officeBBC
Fregona, viewed from the mayor's office, has a shrinking population

Winding down the narrow main street of his north Italian town, Giacomo de Luca points to the businesses that have closed: two supermarkets, a barbershop, restaurants – all with shutters drawn and faded signs above their doors.

The pretty town of Fregona at the foot of the mountains is emptying out like many here, as Italians have fewer children and increasingly migrate to bigger places or move abroad.

Now the local primary school is at risk and the mayor is worried.

"The new Year One can't go ahead because there are only four children. They want to shut it down," De Luca explains. The minimum class size to get funding is 10 children.

"The drop in births and in the population has been very, very sharp."

The mayor calculates that the population of Fregona, an hour's drive north of Venice, has shrunk by almost a fifth in the past decade.

By June this year there were just four new births and most of the 2,700 or so remaining residents are elderly, from the men drinking their morning prosecco to the women filling their bags with chicory and tomatoes at the weekly market.

Mayor Giacomo de Luca, a man in a navy blue polo shirt, stands in front of buildings
Giacomo de Luca is worried about the future of Fregona's primary school

For De Luca, closing the school reception class would be a tide-turner: if the children leave Fregona to study, he fears they will never look back.

So he's been touring the surrounding area, even visiting a nearby pizza factory, trying to persuade parents to send their children to his town and help keep the school open.

"I'm offering to pick them up with a minibus, we've offered for children to stay at school until six in the evening, all paid for by the council," the mayor told the BBC, his sense of urgency obvious.

"I'm worried. Little by little, if things keep going like this, the village will die."

Nationwide problem

Italy's demographic crisis extends far beyond Fregona and it is deepening.

Over the past decade, the population nationwide has contracted by almost 1.9 million and the number of births has fallen for 16 consecutive years.

On average, Italian women are now having just 1.18 babies, the lowest level ever recorded. That's under the EU average fertility rate of 1.38 and far below the 2.1 needed to sustain the population.

Despite its efforts to encourage childbirth, and much talk of family-friendly politics, Giorgia Meloni's right-wing government has been unable to stop the slide.

"You have to think a lot before having a baby," Valentina Dottor admits when we meet on Fregona's main square, her 10-month-old daughter Diletta cooing in a pushchair.

Valentina, a woman with dark hair and glasses, holds a baby in a pink jumper.
Valentina is due to return to work soon, and her daughter Diletta will be cared for by family

Valentina gets an allowance of around €200 (£175) a month for Diletta's first year, but just missed out on the government's new Baby Bonus of €1,000 for children born in 2025.

There are new tax breaks, too, and longer parental leave.

But Valentina now needs to return to work and says accessing affordable childcare is still very tough.

"There are not many babies, but not many kindergarten [places] either," she says. "I am lucky to have my grandmother take care of my daughter. If not, I don't know where I would leave her."

That's why her friends are wary of motherhood.

"It's difficult - because of work, schools, the money," Valentina says. "There is some help, but it's not enough to have babies.

"It won't solve the problem."

Self-help schemes

Some companies in the Veneto region have taken matters into their own hands.

A short drive down into the valley from Fregona is a big industrial estate filled with small and medium-sized firms, many run by families.

Irinox, a blast chiller manufacturer, spotted the parenting problem long ago and decided to act rather than lose valuable workers.

The firm joined forces with seven others to create a creche a short walk from the factory floor – not free, but heavily discounted and convenient. It was the first of its kind in Italy.

Melania, a woman with long dark hair and glasses, is seen in front of a factory floor
Irinox employee Melania was able to use the creche near her workplace

"Knowing I had the chance to put my son two minutes from here was very important, because I can reach him any time, very fast," one of the firm's finance bosses, Melania Sandrin, explains.

Without the creche she would have struggled to return to work: she didn't want to lean on her own parents, and state kindergartens won't generally take children for a full day.

"There's also a priority list… and there are few, few places," Melania says.

Like Valentina, she and her friends delayed having children into their late 30s, keen to establish their careers, and Melania isn't sure she'd have a second baby, even now. "It's not easy," she says.

Later childbirth, a growing trend here, is another factor in lowering fertility.

All of that is why CEO Katia da Ros thinks Italy needs to make "massive changes" to address its population problem.

"It's not the €1,000 payments that make a difference, but having services like free kindergartens. If we want to change the situation we need strong action," she says.

Katia da Ros, a woman with dark hair in a white shirt
Irinox boss Katia da Ros says greater changes are needed to enable Italians to have more babies

The other solution is increased immigration, which is far more contentious for Meloni's government.

More than 40% of the workers at Irinox are already from abroad.

A map on the factory wall dotted with pins shows they come from Mongolia to Burkina Faso. Barring an unlikely sudden surge in childbirth, Katia da Ros argues Italy – like Veneto – will need more foreign workers to drive its economy.

"The future will be like that."

End of a school era

Even immigration couldn't save a school in nearby Treviso.

Last month, Pascoli Primary shut its doors for good because there weren't enough pupils to sustain it.

School closing ceremony - men in Alpine hats hold a flag and a bugle
A ceremony was held to mark the closure of this school in Treviso, where pupil numbers had fallen

Just 27 children gathered on the school steps for a final ceremony marked by an Alpine bugler with a feather in his hat, who sounded the Last Post as the Italian flag was lowered.

"It's a sad day," Eleanora Franceschi said, collecting her 8-year-old daughter for one last time. From September, she'll have to travel much further to a different school.

Eleanora doesn't believe the falling birthrate alone is to blame: she says Pascoli school didn't teach in the afternoons, making life harder for working parents who then moved their children elsewhere.

The headteacher has another explanation.

"This area has been transformed because many people from abroad came here," Luana Scarfi told the BBC, referring to two decades of migration to the Veneto region with multiple factories and plenty of jobs.

Headteacher Luana Scarfi, a woman in a white top with blonde hair
Headteacher Luana Scarfi says there are many reasons behind the falling school rolls

"Some [families] then decided to go to other schools where the immigration index was less high."

"Over the years, we had lower and lower people who decided to come to this school," the headmistress says, in English, hinting at tensions.

A UN prediction suggests Italy's population will drop by about five million in the next 25 years, from 59 million. It's ageing, too, increasing the strain on the economy.

Government measures to tackle that have so far only scratched the surface.

But Eleanora argues parents like her need a lot more help with services, not just cash handouts, for a start.

An older man, a mum and a daughter are seen in front of a building
Eleanora, seen with her daughter and father, says seeing her child's school close was a sad day

"We get monthly cheques but we need practical support, too, like free summer camps for the children," she says, pointing to the three-month school holiday from June that can be a nightmare for parents who work.

"The government wants a bigger population but at the same time, they're not helping," Eleanora says.

"How can we have more babies in this situation?"

Produced by Davide Ghiglione.

Malaria ‘back with a vengeance’ in Zimbabwe as number of deaths from the disease triple

19 July 2025 at 12:00
Closeup of a mosquito on skintheguardian.org

Zimbabwe’s efforts to control malaria have been dealt a huge blow as experts say the disease has returned “with a vengeance” after US aid cuts, with 115 outbreaks recorded in 2025 compared with only one last year.

The sharp rise in cases comes six months after Donald Trump halted critical funding for US research and national response programmes.

The cuts in January, which included funding for tuberculosis, HIV/Aids and malaria programmes, crippled the Zimbabwe Entomological Support Programme in Malaria (Zento) at Africa University in Mutare, which provides the country’s National Malaria Control Programme with scientific research to combat the disease.

Cumulative malaria cases increased by 180% in the first four months of 2025, according to the health ministry, while the number of malaria-related deaths increased by 218%, from 45 in the same period in 2024 to 143 in 2025. As of 26 June, the number of malaria cases had risen to 119,648, with 334 deaths, according to the Zimbabwean health ministry.

The distribution of essential control methods, such as mosquito nets, was also disrupted, leaving hundreds of thousands of people exposed to mosquito bites across the country. The health ministry said in May that 1,615,000 insecticide-treated nets were being distributed but that there was a shortfall of 600,000 due to the withdrawal of US funding.

Itai Rusike, director of Zimbabwe’s Community Working Group on Health, said funding shortfalls were jeopardising the country’s significant gains against malaria over the past 20 years.

“Sustained domestic funding is critical to keep prevention and treatment efforts on track,” he said.

“If mosquito nets and preventive medicines for pregnant women are unavailable, lives will be lost. When the supply of test kits and first-line treatments is disrupted, malaria cases and deaths will spiral.”

Children under the age of five account for 14% of total malaria cases.

Zimbabwe has set out to eliminate malaria by 2030, in line with the ambitious goal set by the African Union, using various strategies such as raising community awareness, preventing mosquito bites with insecticide-treated nets and spraying, as well as improving surveillance systems.

Dr Henry Madzorera, a former health minister, said Zimbabwe should mobilise its own resources to bridge the funding gap.

“We have a lot of taxes earmarked for the health sector – let us use them wisely for health promotion and disease prevention,” he said. “People must be treated early for malaria.

“The country should not rely on donors to do malaria-elimination activities,” Madzorera added.

In 2024, USAID disbursed $270m for health and agriculture programmes in Zimbabwe.

Zimbabwe’s deputy health minister, Sleiman Kwidini, admitted the funding gap left by the US cuts had disrupted the provision of mosquito nets.

“We are now taking over the procurement of those nets after the US withdrew funding. We have just been disturbed, but our vision is to eliminate malaria by 2030,” he said.

Prof Sungano Mharakurwa, director of Africa University’s Malaria Institute, said it would take time to recover lost ground but added: “If we get funding, we can hit the ground running and promptly return to scoring successes again, until we beat this deadly scourge that is malaria.”

He said that since the Zento mosquito surveillance programme began in Manicaland province, there had been a marked reduction in malaria cases and it was about to be extended when the US cuts came.

“Working with the National Malaria Control Programme, it had just been expanded,” Mharakurwa said. “It was poised to run for five years with national coverage when it was abruptly terminated.”

Africa University data shows that Manicaland recorded 145,775 malaria cases in 2020 but just 28,387 after Zento was introduced in 2021. Malaria cases in the province had been further reduced to 8,035 by 2024 before more than trebling to 27,212 the following year, when US funding was cut.

Mharakurwa said: “The malaria was back with a vengeance straight after, and [numbers of] cases that were waning rebounded in 2025, surpassing levels that had ever been seen since the beginning of the project.”

Above-normal rains this year, which aided malaria transmission, had worsened the situation, he added.

Ten African women and men walking along a stone dam wall with partially submerged acacia-type trees in the background

草台班子啊

By: chengzhi
18 July 2025 at 16:55
chengzhi:

这一波杭州臭水、仅仅发了两个通告、有偿 5 吨水?
波及四五十万人、各种小道消息层出不清、迟迟不公开原因、是不是事情真的很大?
全过人民都知道杭州人吃米田共了吧
小区水箱打开一层黄黄的恶臭熏天、清理后请问你还敢用吗
已经两三天没洗澡了、每天都花钱买矿泉水做饭、家里衣服也好几天没洗了、根本不敢用自来水、家里还有小月龄宝宝、衣服需要经常换洗
发个小红书、街道电话让你删帖、 唉、过一天算一天吧

有没有大佬告诉我单元测试用在哪里?这个问题困扰我好久了

By: tiRolin
18 July 2025 at 14:29
tiRolin:

在学习的时候就经常听人说单元测试很重要,但是我每次看单元测试我都没搞懂这跟我手动 API 测试有啥区别?我感觉单元测试还更麻烦了,因为单元测试还需要自己创建测试数据自己测试核心逻辑和业务逻辑,我手动 API 测试不也能走一遍吗?然后说是单元测试更全面,但是我看单元测试的用例也是要我手写啊,这两个真有区别吗?

而且单元测试比手动调 api 测试麻烦好多,比如说我现在在做的菜单树功能,我不太理解单元测试我就让 cursor 帮我生成,他框框一顿写就已经有四百行代码了,这要是人力来写这不是写单元测试的时间都要比写功能本身还要花更久的时间了吗?

是不是实际开发的时候其实大多数简单功能,比如说我的菜单树是不会进行单元测试的,只会做简单的自测,而对于确实很复杂有必要长期维护的核心功能比如支付这种才对做单元测试?

在 Suol 遇到饭托的经历。

By: bloks
18 July 2025 at 12:58
bloks:

因为平时宅的原因,认识异性的机会少,所以就尝试了一下在 suol 上加了个女的微信一个星期左右,然后约了一起吃饭。

在这一个星期左右时间里,对方每天早上会主动发消息(基本上就是一个表情包),然后中午时间偶尔会拍个午饭吃的什么,晚上十点左右会聊一会然后结束说要休息了,当时就有点怀疑,在深圳的年轻人晚上十点就休息。这么规律的作息的人设总感觉哪里不对,但是没在这个问题上纠结。

约见面吃饭的那天是对方,在下午三四点的时候突然问有没有时间一起吃个饭。我就答应了,对方发了个定位,在福田区皇岗。

说她在“某衣服”(一个女装品牌)福田区分店上班的,我就过去找她了。

导航到目的地后,由于定位有点误差,然后我就微信语音跟对方确认。这个过程中不知道什么原因,对方听不到我说话的声音,但是我能听到对方说话,所以就拨通挂断了两三次,在第三次挂断的时候,我听到对方骂了一句傻逼。

这个时候我就感觉对方有问题了,想着都跑过来了,就看看这到底是什么套路,因为在约在公众场合,所以也不担心安全问题。

见面后发现人和她朋友发的照片明显的不是一个人。具体外貌就不评价了,我是看着对方朋友圈的照片才愿意约饭的。

对方手里拿着两个手机,我走向她的过程中,她拿着一个手机对着我拍了一张照片。

首先是她问我去吃什么?我说我对这里不是太熟悉,你在这附近上班,你推荐一下吃什么。然后她就带着我找吃的,沿着一排灯火通明的餐饮门店,在走的过程中她不停的在手机上回消息,和我只简单的说了几句话。就当我以为就在其中选一家的时候,她走到尽头拐了个弯,沿着一条小路走进去(环境光是昏暗的风格那种),走到尽头的时候有个老板对着她的表情(那种笑,感觉是在笑我)。

然后走进了一家西餐点,店里面全是暗黑风格,灯光很暗,一楼没有人,带着我走到二楼,二楼有一桌(一男一女)。然后点菜的时候她让我点,我这个时候已经确认这是套路了。就让她点,她点了两份牛排饭,一份 200 块出头的样子。问我可不可以?我说我不喜欢吃这个,要不换一家炒菜的店吧。这个时候她就生气了,直接问我是不是觉得价格贵了?我说没有,我就是不喜欢吃牛排,我说去刚刚路过的那一排灯火通明的店铺找一家炒菜的吃。

对方也没多就纠缠,下楼的过程中,我看到她手机里切换账号的界面,同时在和好几个人约饭,下一个在来的路上了。走出这家店之后我就假装接了个电话,她有点不耐烦的说:你要有事就先走吧。我说好吧,就直接走了,自己找个了个地方吃饭,吃完就回家了。

过了几天,越想越气就想着去 Suol 举报她,发现对方被封了。

本想发一下图片上来,不知道怎么发。

用 nextjs 搓了一个 游戏 主题的博客

By: CRipple
18 July 2025 at 12:09
CRipple:

一直用的是 WordPress + 免费主题 ,第一次尝试 nextjs ,实现了自己的一套博客系统。

基本就是喜欢什么就缝合上去,也参考了其他博客的一些创意。

现在基础框架差不多搞定了,后续会加点样式和小功能,后端 supabase ,前端部署在 Vercel ,发出来给大佬们批判/反馈一下。

网址: https://blog.hiripple.com/zh 。 载入速度应该还行?优化了挺久

Thousands of Afghans won't be compensated by UK for data breach

19 July 2025 at 11:52
EPA Supporters of the Taliban, some carrying guns and the white flag, celebrate the third anniversary of the group's takeover of Afghanistan.EPA
Thousands of Afghans could be at risk of reprisal from the Taliban following the leak

Thousands of Afghans whose personal details were leaked but who were not evacuated to Britain are not expected to receive any compensation.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) will "robustly defend against any legal action or compensation", a spokesperson told the BBC, adding that these were "hypothetical claims".

The MoD will also not proactively give small payouts to people whose lives were put in danger after the February 2022 leak, the Times reported.

The names and details of more than 19,000 people were leaked, with many Afghans now saying they fear retribution from the Taliban.

The spokesperson added that an independent review, known as the Rimmer review, commissioned by the Defence Secretary John Healey found: "It is highly unlikely that merely being on the spreadsheet would be grounds for an individual to be targeted."

This week, Healey announced the lifting of a super-injunction that made it illegal to both publicise the leak and refer to the existence of the court order.

That came after the completion of the Rimmer review, which concluded: "There is little evidence of intent by the Taliban to conduct a campaign of retribution against former officials."

The largest lawsuit is being prepared by Barings Law, a firm that has more than 1,000 Afghan clients, according to The Times.

It is unclear how many of those clients are currently in Afghanistan.

The leak occurred when an unnamed official emailed the spreadsheet outside of the government team processing Afghan relocation applications and it made its way into the public domain.

Knowledge of the leak only emerged in August 2023, when the names of nine people who had applied to move to the UK appeared on Facebook.

The Taliban leadership continues to face international isolation due to its human rights abuses, especially those targeting women. Russia is the only country that recognises the current Afghan government, and the British embassy to Kabul has remained close since the Taliban takeover in 2021.

An Afghan man who had been turned down for relocation was responsible for sharing the names on Facebook, and was offered an expedited review of his application in return for taking it down, the BBC reported last week.

More than 100 British officials, including members of the special forces and MI6, were compromised in the same data breach.

Since the withdrawal of international troops from Afghanistan, more than 36,000 Afghans have moved to the UK. Of those, more than 16,000 individuals were deemed to have been at risk from the leak, the MoD confirmed to the BBC.

The government has so far spent £400m on the scheme to relocate Afghans.

But the total cost of relocating all Afghans is expected to rise to around £5.5-£6bn, according to the government.

看一个老哥的帖子有感,蹲一个惠州(惠阳淡水)靠谱的装修公司

19 July 2025 at 09:45
kevinmissu:

如题

人在深圳,也是平日加班多,索性找个靠谱的全包

装修这块纯小白,最近有要娃的打算了,所以准备先装着,然后放置一段时间 散散甲醛气味之类的。

希望推荐一个靠谱的装修公司,预算也不多 89 平 大概 15w 左右吧

Qt 招募(兼职,远程,签合同)

19 July 2025 at 09:16
liujinfan19: 招聘要求(兼职,远程,签合同):
工作内容:开发基于 Qt/PyQt 的交互性程序( PC 平台或 ARM 平台),涉及 Resful 接口调用、4K 视频播放、常规的人脸识别接口调用。web 服务开发,涉及到算法服务接口调用,K8S 部署,基于 Flask/celery/redis/mongodb 分布式系统开发。
基本要求:
1.熟练使用 C++与 QT ;
2.熟练使用 python 与 PyQT;
3.熟练使用 Flask 、mongoDB 、K8S ;
4.熟练使用 Ubuntu 操作系统;
5.部署过深度学习算法者优先;
6.有前后端开发经验者优先;

待遇:10K~20K 月,面议。
工作时间:每月周一~周五。定期开会,交付功能,维护现有软件。
说明:近期需要增添很多新功能,团队缺人手。
若想加入团队也可,水平高可许一些原始股。

微信号:sixgodguardme

分享一个自己做的小工具: AI 轮播图生成器

By: deity888
19 July 2025 at 08:51
deity888:

各位 V 友好,

分享一个我最近独立开发的免费小工具:aiCarousels.pro

初衷

之前工作经常要做内容,每次用 Canva 做轮播图都觉得很繁琐,就萌生了自己做一个的想法,主要为了解决自己的痛点。

这个工具的核心就是完全免费、不用注册,希望能让大家做图更简单。

技术栈

  • 前端: Next.js 15 + React 19 + Tailwind CSS
  • AI: 主要通过 AI SDK 接了 OpenAI 和 Google 的模型
  • 部署: Vercel

它能做什么

  • 模板丰富: 内置了 50 多套设计模板,可以直接用。
  • 导出方便: 支持导出成 PDF 或 ZIP ,而且没有水印

体验地址: https://www.aicarousels.pro/

欢迎大家随便玩玩,任何反馈对我都很宝贵。谢谢!

Homebrew 的 maintainer 真的是有点魔怔了

By: xuegy
19 July 2025 at 08:32
xuegy: 手滑 brew 更新了一把,结果 cmake 就挂了,一看直接大版本给干到了 4.0 。
某位正常思维的老哥试图让他们把 3.x 加回来,被 maintainer 一顿批评教育: https://github.com/orgs/Homebrew/discussions/6058
上一次类似的事情,就因为某个人提了一个稀奇古怪的 issue ,他们把 libomp 不声不响的变成 keg-only ,一堆科学计算软件都挂了。可能因为科学计算圈子太小,大家自己默默的重新适配了。
这帮人得是魔怔到什么程度才敢得罪全体码农折腾 cmake 这种基础工具?

吐槽爬虫(来自火山引擎 IP)伪装 UserAgent

By: netnr
19 July 2025 at 08:08
netnr:
IP Count
180.184.145.7 11353
180.184.147.195 5781
106.92.145.252 234

China Beijing
Beijing Volcano Engine Technology Co. Ltd.

前三名的 IP 请求统计,前面两个都是火山引擎的 IP ,不清楚这个是火山引擎自己的爬虫还是卖给用户的云服务器,UserAgent 不带 Bot 而是伪装正常的用户访问,非常鄙视这种行为,网站本身对爬虫无限制,但是将爬虫进行了分类,方便统计有效的用户数据,而这种行为有被恶心到。

图片说明

骚扰型营销,电话两头的人都累

一场针对金融类电话营销的诉讼,侵权边缘的模糊地带与存量竞争

(本文首发于南方人物周刊)

南方人物周刊实习记者 欧阳思帆 南方人物周刊记者 聂阳欣

责任编辑:陈雅峰

(视觉中国/图)

手机屏幕上出现一串陌生数字的来电,胡毅克制住挂断电话的冲动,警惕地接听,对面传来的声音并非他预想中的电话推销,而是法官。他知道自己有些反应过激,“当你接到的陌生号码有90%以上都是推销的,你肯定自动认为剩下的10%也是。”

2025年3月22日,胡毅将某银行信用卡中心(以下简称“信用卡中心”)一纸诉状告至上海市浦东新区法院。2月底3月初,他连续接到对方关于贷款等业务的推销电话,口头拒绝和投诉都无法停止对方的推销,最终选择诉诸法律。

法官打电话告诉胡毅,被告愿意赔款,但希望把书面道歉改为当庭道歉。胡毅拒绝了,比起赔偿,他更想要一份书面内容,告诉更多人,这件事是错误的。“打骚扰电话成本比较低,那我要通过给他们增加一点成本,让他们重新去思考打客户推销电话应该怎么样去做会更加合理。”

决定用诉讼来维权

胡毅总是在工作时段接到金融机构的推销电话,他尝试过通信商提供的高频骚扰电话拦截功能,但AI拦截的识别功能不完全准确。有一次,胡毅去旅游,AI错误拦截了酒店和租车公司的电话。

2月27日,看到信用卡中心来电时,胡毅怀疑是不是忘记还款或信用卡出现异常交易,他停下手边的事,接听电话,发现只是一通银行产品推销电话。随后一周,他又接到两通同样来自信用卡中心的推销电话。他投诉至金融消费者保护服务平台,要求银行不再骚扰,分管负责人亲自致歉,并赔偿合理精神损失200元。

信用卡中心很快打来了电话,话务员告诉胡毅,银行已对他设置推销屏蔽,向他道歉,但公司无法赔款,只能给小礼品作为赔偿。胡毅认为银行不应该把责任抛给职员,给礼品的处理方式也让他感到自己的要求被轻视了,他有些气愤。

真正想到用诉讼来维权,是再次收到信用卡中心的三条营销短信之后,胡毅告诉银行自己准备诉讼,银行在十天内打来十几通电话沟通。但就他第二次投诉要求的500元赔偿进行多次议价后,也无法给出公司层面的致歉。

胡毅曾自学法律知识,利用AI工具初步搜索后,他查到更为具体的法条和案例,民法典第一千零三十三条规定:“任何组织或者个人不得以电话、短信、即时通讯工具、电子邮件、传单等方

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校对:赵立宇

欢迎分享、点赞与留言。本作品的版权为南方周末或相关著作权人所有,任何第三方未经授权,不得转载,否则即为侵权。

聚焦社会治理,十四届全国政协召开第六次专题协商会丨时政周报

吴英杰一审被判死缓。

今年全国夏粮产量2994.8亿斤,为历史第二高产年。

河南平顶山再次通报鲁山县花715万元建雕塑,多人已获刑。
一周时政新闻回顾(2025年7月12日—7月18日)

南方周末记者 李桂

责任编辑:钱炜

2025年6月3日,北京市门头沟区,在永定镇大党委综合体内,涉及民生的大事小情都能解决,市民既可以在此找到相关负责人解决民生诉求,也能参与丰富多彩的文化活动。据门头沟区介绍,惠康、惠润大党委成立以来,累计解决民生问题五百余件,已入选2024年度首都社会治理创新实践案例。(视觉中国/图)

2025年6月3日,北京市门头沟区,在永定镇大党委综合体内,涉及民生的大事小情都能解决,市民既可以在此找到相关负责人解决民生诉求,也能参与丰富多彩的文化活动。据门头沟区介绍,惠康、惠润大党委成立以来,累计解决民生问题五百余件,已入选2024年度首都社会治理创新实践案例。(视觉中国/图)

2025年7月15日,全国政协“完善和创新社会治理”专题协商会在北京召开。这是十四届全国政协本年度举行的第二次专题协商会,近百位全国政协委员参加会议,22名政协委员在会上作了发言。

专题协商会是政协全国委员会组织政协常委、委员围绕国家的大政方针,就经济、政治、文化、社会、生态文明和党的建设中的某项专门问题进行协商讨论、议政建言的会议形式。《政协全国委员会专题协商会工作办法》(以下简称《工作办法》)规定,专题协商会一般每年召开2次,会期1天,分别安排在第二、三季度举行。

本次政协专题协商会的筹备工作至迟开始于2025年4月。按照《工作办法》的要求,在专题协商会召开前,政协全国委员会办公厅和有关专门委员会需要组织政协常委、委员围绕议题深入开展调研视察。

据《人民政协报》报道,2025年4月21日至25日,全国政协副主席、民革中央常务副主席何报翔率调研组赴江苏省南京市、扬州市、无锡市开展调研;6月12日至13日,社会和法制委员会调研组围绕会议议题到北京市12345市民热线服务中心、社会治安综合治理中心、街道社区等再次开展调研。

在调研前,社会和法制委员会与中央社会工作部、中央政法委、最高人民法院、公安部等部门已经进行了多次沟通对接,相关部门就“完善和创新社会治理”提供了详细的书面情况介绍,让委员们更加明确深入一线调研时的履职方向与任务。

调研的收获,被带到了专题协商会的会场。全国政协社会和法制委员会主任徐令义在发言中介绍:“调研中我们发现,当前我国经济社会正处于加速转型期,各种可以预见和难以预见的风险因素有所增多,社会治理难度也在增大。”

《人民政协报》在报道中表示,“完善社会矛盾纠纷多元预防调处化解综合机制”,是委员们建言资政聚焦的议题之一。建立矛盾纠纷多元预防化解机制能够分层次地为不同类型的社会矛盾提供相应的解决渠道,促使矛盾纠纷在萌芽状态就能得到及时、有效、公平、合理地解决。

中国政协网公布的信息显示,2023年以来,十四届全国政协迄今召开了6次专题协商会,主题包括“增强中华文明传播力影响力”“统筹城乡融合发展,全面推进乡村振兴”“坚持以人口高质量发展支撑中国式现代化”“推进高水平对外开放”等。

按照《工作办法》的规定,专题协商会议题需要在广泛征求党政部门、党派团体、政协专门委员会、政协委员等方面意见基础上提出,并列入政协全国委员会年度协商计划,按程序提交审议后确定。  

上海市社会主义学院原副院长姚俭建曾在文章中指出,专题协商不仅目标明确、一事一议,而且面对面平等对话与互动,具有议题鲜明、研讨集中、交流互动等特点。

从全国政协及各地实践看,专题协商很大一部分

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校对:星歌

欢迎分享、点赞与留言。本作品的版权为南方周末或相关著作权人所有,任何第三方未经授权,不得转载,否则即为侵权。

Trump administration asks court to release some Epstein documents

19 July 2025 at 10:47
Getty Images Trump gives a thumbs up at a bill signing ceremony on Friday. Getty Images

President Donald Trump has filed a lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal's parent company, its owner and two reporters, over a report claiming Trump wrote a "bawdy" personal note to paedophile Jeffrey Epstein in 2003.

The lawsuit, filed in Miami, names Dow Jones, News Corp and conservative media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, claiming the paper slandered him and violated libel laws.

Earlier, Trump had threatened that he would force Murdoch "to testify in my lawsuit against him and his 'pile of garbage' newspaper".

Trump says the note, which the paper reported he'd sent for Epstein's 50th birthday, is "fake". It comes amid a backlash from his supporters over his handling of the Epstein case files.

Trump acknowledged that he and members of his staff attempted to halt publication of the story. He said the newspaper and Murdoch "were warned directly" they would be sued if they printed the article, describing it as "false, malicious, and defamatory".

The lawsuit also names the two reporters who wrote the story, Khadeeja Safdar and Joseph Palazzolo.

Earlier on Friday, Trump took to his Truth Social platform, writing: "I look forward to getting Rupert Murdoch to testify in my lawsuit against him and his 'pile of garbage' newspaper, the WSJ. That will be an interesting experience!!!"

According to the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), a letter bearing Trump's name "contained several lines of typewritten text framed by the outline of a naked woman, which appears to be hand-drawn with a heavy marker".

"Inside the outline of the naked woman was a typewritten note styled as an imaginary conversation between Trump and Epstein, written in the third person," the paper reports.

It reportedly contains a joking reference that "Enigmas never age" and allegedly ends with the words: "A pal is a wonderful thing. Happy Birthday – and may every day be another wonderful secret."

Trump denied writing the note after the article was published on Thursday, posting: "These are not my words, not the way I talk. Also, I don't draw pictures."

On Friday, Trump declined to answer reporters' questions about his relationship with Epstein, and why he had not ordered the release of more documents.

Instead, he asked the Attorney General to produce documents related to secretive grand jury testimony, which could prove to be a lengthy court process. It's unclear when or if those documents will be released, or if they contain the details Trump's supporters have been demanding be released publicly.

Trump's order concerning grand jury testimony came after days of sustained pressure from some of his most loyal supporters demanding further disclosures in the Epstein case.

Some Trump loyalists have called for Attorney General Pam Bondi to resign after she reversed course on releasing certain documents related to Epstein.

In February, Bondi said that a "client list" belonging to Epstein was "sitting on my desk right now". Then last week, her office announced that there is no such "client list".

Chad Bianco, a Republican sheriff running for California governor, told BBC News that Trump's handling of the Epstein files was "not what I was expecting" and that "millions" of his followers are disappointed.

"We feel like we're being talked down to like stupid children."

Trump and Murdoch have a relationship that goes back decades.

The 94-year-old media tycoon's media empire, which includes Fox News, is often credited with helping propel Trump to the White House.

But the two grew more distant over the years and their relationship started to collapse following Trump's loss at the ballot box in 2020 to Joe Biden.

"We want to make Trump a non-person," Murdoch wrote in an email that emerged during court battles over Fox's role spreading misinformation in the 2020 election.

Trump's more recent victory in 2024 appeared to bring the two together again. During a February visit to the White House, Trump referred to Murdoch as "a class by himself" and "an amazing guy".

On Sunday, the two men were pictured together attending the Fifa World Cup in New Jersey.

Attorney General Bondi was also seen watching the match from the president's private box.

Meanwhile, members of Congress are pushing to pass a "discharge petition" that would force Bondi to "make publicly available in a searchable and downloadable format all unclassified records, documents, communications, and investigative materials in the possession of the Department of Justice, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation and United States Attorneys' Offices" relating to Epstein.

The effort has brought together some of Congress's fiercest opponents, including Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene and Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez who are both signed on as supporters.

Sohei Kamiya Brings Trump-Style Populism to Japan’s Election

19 July 2025 at 12:01
With his calls to limit foreign workers, fight globalism and put “Japanese First,” Sohei Kamiya has brought a fiery right-wing populism to Japan’s election on Sunday.

© Ko Sasaki for The New York Times

Sohei Kamiya, the leader of an upstart right-wing political party called Sanseito, delivering a campaign speech this month at Takasaki Station in Gunma Prefecture, north of Tokyo.
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