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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • masterofn001@lemmy.catoScience Memes@mander.xyzKnow Nut November
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    6 days ago

    When my neighbor first noticed them I thought they were fruit.

    Google lens suggested a thousand things that were not what it was. Japanese this, or Indian that.

    It does smell very much like citrus, though.

    The flesh is tough and yellow but almost immediately turns dark brown. So it was too late when I noticed my fingers had stained.

    Limey nut would be an appropriate name for it.

    Black walnut is a weird thing.






  • Why? We are a multi party nation.

    NDP is always pushed aside because people are scared of the cons.

    The liberals are just as bad as the cons but in a different way.

    Canada’s national identity is basically the results of the work of the NDP. Yet they are never given opportunity.

    Look what happened in the States.

    The fucking Antichrist now had another 4 years because the dems focused on their own interests instead of the common folk.

    The liberals have ignored everyone but their faces in a mirror.

    Nothing would have been accomplished if the NDP hadnt pushed them to.

    Anyway, welcome to the tribulations.

    People are clueless the literal hell they’ve unleashed.


  • Surgeons have detected a slimey orange mass which spread rapidly through the body politic.

    Previous attempts to excise the malignant lump have been sidelined by a secondary drug resistant infection.

    As of today it has metastasized beyond the host into a late stage terminal condition.

    Amputation has not been ruled out.


  • For anyone who already knows the truth of this meme, or who would like to know more about the vast methods of deception and how to spot and counter them, this DEFCON 32 talk is incredible.

    DEF CON 32 - Counter Deception: Defending Yourself in a World Full of Lies - Tom Cross, Greg Conti

    The Internet was supposed to give us access to the world’s information, so that people, everywhere, would be able to know the truth. But that’s not how things worked out. Instead, we have a digital deception engine of global proportions. Nothing that comes through the screen can be trusted, and even the things that are technically true have been selected, massaged, and amplified in support of someone’s messaging strategy.

    Deception isn’t just about narratives - we see deception at every layer of the network stack, from spoofed electromagnetic signatures, to false flags in malware, to phony personas used to access networks and spread influence. They hide in our blindspots, exploit our biases, and fill our egos while manipulating our perceptions.

    How do we decide what is real? This talk examines time-tested maxims that teach the craft of effective deception, and then inverts those offensive principles to provide defensive strategies. We’ll explore ways to counter biases, triangulate information sources, detect narratives, and how hackers can build tools that can change the game.