Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
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depemig.social.coop.ap.brid.gy
Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
@depemig.social.coop.ap.brid.gy
Musician, psychologist, statistician, software connaisseur. Interested in the future of democracy, the future the web, and algemene wijsneuzerij

Tooting about […]

🌉 bridged from ⁂ https://social.coop/@DePemig, follow @ap.brid.gy to interact
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
Interested in the #fediverse and #socialweb but can't be at #fosdem? All the talks are livestreaming at https://live.fosdem.org/watch/h2215, come watch!
FOSDEM 2026 - Stream H.2215 (Ferrer)
live.fosdem.org
January 31, 2026 at 10:48 AM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
FYI today's talk was moved 10 minutes earlier to 17:10 CET
January 31, 2026 at 10:27 AM
What Brussels looked like upon arriving today.

#fosdem #socialweb #fediverse #brussels #forreal
January 30, 2026 at 7:29 PM
Ik heb het #Coalitieakkoord zelf niet gelezen, maar in de samenvattingen die ik heb gelezen komt het woord "vermogen" in combinatie met "belasting" nul keer voor.
Lekker #vvd weer! Vrijheid blijheid!
January 30, 2026 at 12:46 PM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
The first position statements for our upcoming un-workshop on Growing the Open Social Web are in. We have added them to https://fediforum.org/2026-03-growing-open-social-web/#papers

Agree? Disagree? Have something to add? Submit your own position statement as part of your registration!

This […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
January 28, 2026 at 7:00 PM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
Just say the news that @schmaker is rebroadcasting the livestream of the #fosdem Social Web Devroom (the fediverse international HQ!) onto Peertube and it already has a live #fediverse url (https://vhsky.cz/w/dQ97cEum3V9QvWP8MS5JVe) so you can copy that into your home servers search field to […]
Original post on social.wake.st
social.wake.st
January 26, 2026 at 8:42 PM
RE: https://mastodon.social/@hanse_mina/115977741112844156

You already knew this, but it is hard to read: #witkoff has no clue about #ukraine, or war, or poliltics in general. The really bad thing: it's not by accident. Show of disdain for expertise or truth itself is intended at paving the way […]
Original post on social.coop
social.coop
January 29, 2026 at 11:31 AM
A old software usage tip that I forget myself again and again, that may be of benefit to anyone:

If you want to learn to work with a new #software that is more advanced than the software you're used to, start by using it for the simple stuff you can already do […]

[Original post on social.coop]
January 29, 2026 at 11:05 AM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
De kraanvogel blijft terugkeren. Dit keer koos hij een nieuw uitkijkpunt op de #a2 bij Breukelen: de auto van de weginspecteur. Het levert National Geographic-achtige beelden op. 😻 Er zijn geen rijstroken dicht en alles is nu veilig. We houden een oogje in het zeil.
January 24, 2026 at 4:03 PM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
I’m very pleased to receive a series of PeerTube abuse report from a #russia Fediverse instance for this @deniskazanskyi video on Russian losses in #ukraine because **this means thanks to ActivityPub it’s reaching exactly the audience it’s intended and in the language it’s intended to reach** […]
Original post on agora.echelon.pl
agora.echelon.pl
January 22, 2026 at 8:03 AM
A question about #vpn
I currently have #proton vpn and I am recomposing my digital services package. I am happy with this VPN (at about euro/chf 3 pm) However, would there be any reason to choose a different VPN over #protonvpn ?

Thanks a lot in advance!
January 21, 2026 at 1:34 PM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
Niet alleen is de Nederlandse maatschappij al vreselijk afhankelijk van Amerikaanse clouds (100% van alle gemeenten, 100% van de notarissen, 100% van de banken). En de dingen die nog niet over zijn wordt hard aan gewerkt die ook te verhuizen. Ik zeg "STOP HOU […]

[Original post on mastodon.nl]
January 17, 2026 at 5:38 PM
My two cents on #tariffs imposed by #trump on #eu countries sending some troops to #greenland : apparently, it hurted donny enough to take ths stupid self-hurting step, so this was a good move by these countries.
January 17, 2026 at 7:54 PM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
On the bright side, maybe the illusion of talks about Greenland can ease some of the hype around the illusion of peace talks for Ukraine.
JUST IN: 🇺🇸🇩🇰 US and Denmark agree to "establish a working group for technical talks on the acquisition of Greenland."
January 15, 2026 at 10:04 PM
Maar eens een gedicht. Van #oboema

Man die bakt
Zon op de huid
De man vangt aan
De man die bakt
Bakt die man?
De man die bakt
Nee, die man die bakt
Man die bakt
Man die bakt bakt bakt bakt bakt
Die man die bakt
Nee, de koekenbakker bakt
De koekenbakker bakt wat de man niet bakt

(1/2)
January 15, 2026 at 6:55 PM
It is great to see the #peertube ecosystem gaining substance. I did not really study this quantitatively, but I find myself ever more often having luck trying a #SepiaSearch before a #duckduck video search. There are some genres very well represented, in particular the more nerdy stuff […]
Original post on social.coop
social.coop
January 15, 2026 at 12:20 PM
RE: https://mastodon.nl/@Hein_Kortoons/115887429024729237

- "If we'd introduce a Nobel price for war, and reward it immediately, this could save us a whole lot of trouble"
- "Smart thinking, Lars"
mastodon.nl
January 13, 2026 at 11:28 AM
I have a question about #activitypub :
Is there a method for: Following from account xyz only post of a certain type (e.g., images) or a certain hashtag (#abcd).

As an example: I would like to be able only to see the comics that a comic artist posts, but not their further opinion. (type is only […]
Original post on social.coop
social.coop
January 10, 2026 at 11:04 AM
Ik kwam vorige week deze tijd terug uit #Armenië waar ik een kleine twee weken had rondgereisd met m'n geliefde. Erg indrukwekkend was dat, maar ik kan er eigenlijk niet zoveel over vertellen.

Ik besef nu dat een vakantie een beetje als een boek kan zijn: Het is […]

[Original post on social.coop]
January 9, 2026 at 11:08 AM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
Trump’s attack on Venezuela signals a new era of U.S. imperialism
In this video, I talk about the American attack on Venezuela and what it says about the state of the world. Honestly, it’s a pretty depressing picture, where American imperialism seems to be something we need to get used to. Watch the video on the website or read the transcript below. Best, Anders * * * ### _Transcript:_ The United States has attacked Venezuela and removed President Maduro. In this video, I want to share a few high-level thoughts about what it means and what it says about the world. So, let's talk about it. The situation in Venezuela is still developing and we don't know how things are going to unfold. It can go in many different directions, so there is a lot of uncertainty. What I want to do here is to share some initial reactions to what we saw happening and what it means. First, I think it's necessary to acknowledge how well executed this military operation was. It was a very big operation. It involved many aircraft, ships, intelligence on the ground, and it all worked out very well. They went in, they took President Maduro and his wife, and they got out again, and the Americans did not take a single casualty. That is extremely impressive. I think it's questionable whether any other military in the world could have done the same as what the Americans did here. So, on the tactical and operational side, this was very well executed and clearly planned out very well. At the strategic and political side, I think things are more murky. Frankly, it's not quite clear what the plan is from here. Donald Trump says that now the United States is going to be running Venezuela for the coming period of time and that they are going to come in with American oil companies and take more or less control of the Venezuelan economy. But how they're planning on doing that is very unclear, especially because it does not seem that the United States is planning on having a military presence in Venezuela. So apparently, they are going to be running the country without actually being in the country. And that is probably not going to work. So while on the tactical and operational side, it seems that there was a very good and clear planning process and very strong execution of the mission to capture Maduro, then on the strategic level, it's less obvious that there is a plan, and it will be interesting to see how this is going to unfold. If we look at it from a broader perspective, I think we're seeing a continuation of three trends that have been observable for some time. The first is that the United States is withdrawing from the rest of the world, and they are focusing on what they call the Western Hemisphere. This is also defined in the new national security strategy that I made a video about a little while ago. The Trump administration sees North and South America as the important sphere of influence for the United States, and they see that the United States should be the dominating great power there. Trump is already now talking about doing the same in other countries that they did in Venezuela. He's hinting at military operations in Mexico, Cuba, and Colombia. And on social media, high-level MAGA profiles are publishing maps that show Greenland as soon to be part of the United States. So increasingly, it seems clear that the Trump administration has an imperialistic agenda that they are trying to push. They have big plans for both territorial conquest and power projection in what they see as their legitimate sphere of influence. Needless to say, this is a very different direction for US foreign politics from what it used to be. And I think, quite frankly, it's a development that most people had not predicted just a year ago when Trump came into office. At that time, what was more discussed was American isolationism. But now we're actually talking about American imperialism. So that's a very significant change in tone. I think it's questionable whether this is going to work for Trump. First, there is a significant risk of what can be called imperial overstretch, where they just take on too much because they assume that it will be easy and that everything is going to go as smoothly as it did to remove Maduro. But then afterwards, it turns out that things are actually more complicated and the United States can end up in situations that are similar to what we saw in Iraq and Afghanistan, because the easy part is removing the previous leader of the country. The hard part is dealing with the turmoil that comes after. So imperial overstretch is one constraint that Trump might run into. Another obstacle is that it's not clear to me whether this imperial project has popular support in the United States. I doubt it. First, there is a very large group of Americans who actually liked the old United States, where they stood for things like freedom, democracy, international law, and human rights. They don't like the direction that their country is going because they feel that it's against the values that America is supposed to stand for. And in addition to that, there is also a very large group of Trump voters who actually voted for him because they believed that what he stood for was American isolationism. They liked the idea that America would not be involved in all kinds of foreign conflicts, but would focus on spending the resources at home and building the American base, and that this is what "America First" meant. They will obviously be disappointed to learn that "America First" apparently means that they will not get out of foreign conflicts, but will instead get involved in a range of new wars in Latin America. So, I think Trump's imperialistic project might run into some domestic opposition in the United States, because this is actually something that can unite large parts of both sides of the political spectrum. Because the United States does not have a history of aggressive imperialism as the national narrative that unites the people. This is the case in Russia, for example, and that's why this kind of project sort of works for Putin. But it will take something special to create that type of public narrative in the United States. It's not just going to come out of nowhere. So that was the first major trend that I think the attack on Venezuela signifies. The second one is what we can call the lawlessness of the American political system. The attack on Venezuela was against international law. That's quite clear. In fact, pretty much everything the United States has been doing in terms of Venezuela over the last half year or so has been illegal. It's been illegal to attack drug boats with missiles. It's been illegal to blockade Venezuela. And this attack and the removal of President Maduro are also against international law. Unfortunately, we live in a time when international law is threatened, but I still think it's worth mentioning. But perhaps even more significant, the attack on Venezuela was against American law. It was against U.S. federal law for Donald Trump to do this without congressional approval. This is not something that the American president can just do. The American president has the authority to do certain things, such as initiate self-defense, for example, without congressional approval, and then he can get that approval afterward. But this was a planned attack that was intended for regime change in a foreign country, which is an act of aggression that the U.S. president is not allowed to do without congressional approval. Yet Donald Trump just did it anyway. So, we're seeing a clear trend where the checks and balances on the US president are falling apart. And increasingly, Donald Trump just does whatever he wants without any checks and balances. And he's committing the US military to war without actually asking anyone for approval. So, the United States is moving in a direction of a more personalistic foreign policy that really depends on the mood of the president. And with Trump, that obviously adds a lot of unpredictability in what we can expect. The last trend I want to emphasize is the fact that perhaps we need to stop talking about great power competition. This has been the kind of mantra in international relations discussions for quite a while that we have great powers in constant competition with each other. However, increasingly, it appears that the three biggest great powers are actually just dividing the world among themselves. The United States is to dominate the Western Hemisphere. China will take East Asia and Russia can dominate Europe. It seems that this is the direction that things are moving: away from constant competition between the great powers and toward an understanding between them about dividing the world into spheres of influence. And if you happen then to live in a country that is in one of these regions and you don't want to be ruled by an imperial great power, then you'd better start thinking about what you're going to do about it. So, those were my initial thoughts about the American attack on Venezuela and the arrest of President Maduro. Even though Maduro was, in every respect, a terrible person and a dictator, and it's good he's gone, I think it's an extremely worrying development. But at the same time, it's also not really something new. It's more an expression of trends that we have been observing for a while in terms of the United States embarking on not American isolationism, but rather actual American imperialism. And also that Trump is increasingly performing foreign policy without any checks and balances or required approval from other institutions in the United States. And that all this points to a future where China, Russia, and the United States seem willing to simply divide the world among them instead of pursuing great power competition as we've been used to thinking about it. Okay, I will end it here. If you found the video helpful or informative, then please give it a like. And if you want to support the channel and get access to bonus videos, you can subscribe to my newsletter on www.logicofwar.com. Thank you very much for watching, and I will see you again next time.
www.logicofwar.com
January 5, 2026 at 9:53 PM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
You shouldn’t have to keep having to take a cognitive assessment for detecting cognitive impairment and dementia!

I wouldn’t be bragging about “passing it” three times in a year.
January 2, 2026 at 2:37 PM
Case study in the misery of #geopolitics - elsewhere I mentioned the ongoing #Iran riots[^1], to which a classic comment guy replied “ah yes, Muricans and Jews meddling!” The problem here a complete and rather arrogant blindness of this Western (but also very much Russian and Chinese) “experts” to the fact that **even your “average brown people in Iran” have brains and can simply get pissed off when there’s shortages of food or hyperinflation** (as in case of Iran right now). We had the same thing in 1980’s in communist #Poland when you had to queue overnight to get meat or basic groceries from shops because there was an artificial shortage of everything. I had no clue what people in the world were saying about this because it was 1980’s and we also had censorship as an added bonus. Only after communism collapsed we learned that in addition to all people who were understanding and compassionate, there was a whole bunch of “geopolitical” morons who naturally argued that it’s just all just CIA staged coups etc. You certainly couldn’t t see that from your couch 5000 km away, but even your average Eastern Europeans can get genuinely pissed off by decades of totalitarian and completely dysfunctional governance. In short, when judging protests in foreign countries always try to get the full context before actually making your judgement. I’ve learned this hard way, which is why I never blanket condemned 2023-2024 Polish farmer’s protests against Ukrainian grain imports – that is until at some point there was a clearly visible Russian infiltration into these protests, at which stage I started to point this out publicly. And yes, there _are_ protests obviously controlled from outside and we had a fantastic case studies in #Donbas in 2014 - groups of barely interested people with identical placards who come and disappear in an organised way. Or a classic riot caused by disinformation, as happened in Southport but these are short lived - you can’t have thousands of people sitting on #Euromaidan in winter for three months for a covert salary, that simply doesn’t happen. P.S. below is a 1988 photo I’ve done on one of such protests in Kraków using a _Smena_ camera and having absolutely zero clue about photography ☺️ [^1]: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cqj2llkjv8vo
agora.echelon.pl
January 1, 2026 at 9:15 AM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
Objective metrics of the #russia advances in #ukraine
December 27, 2025 at 6:21 AM
Reposted by Gilles DePemig :TwinPines:
Reading recent #vance interview in full makes it much more balanced that earlier fragments quoted by media. Still, you can see a rather astonishing level of confusion among US elites about what’s going on in #ukraine and #russia

For example, Vance’s rhetorical question “what will happen to […]
Original post on agora.echelon.pl
agora.echelon.pl
December 26, 2025 at 11:53 AM