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have you tried turning it off and on again?
operator of https://league.adamski2003.lol
steward of the https://websiteleague.org
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hey check this out:

Shots fired—that is how observers described the landmark legal decision in late May in a case brought by a Peruvian farmer against a German coal giant, that ruled fossil fuel producers could be held accountable under German law for the climate harms they have caused around the world. It was a groundbreaking moment, a decade in the making, that began in 2015 when Saul Lucian Lliuya realized he had a problem: the constant threat of catastrophic flooding he and the other 120,000 residents of his hometown, Huaraz, faced. Above Huaraz sits Lake Palcacocha, one of several glacier lakes that supplies the city’s drinking water. Over decades, water levels have occasionally risen, but as global average temperatures have increased, the surrounding glaciers have shrunk, pushing the lake to capacity and the point where a catastrophic flood is now inevitable.

None of this happened by chance. Pointing to the science that climate change was being driven by fossil fuel production, the Peruvian farmer from a city in the foothills of the Andes set out to do something ambitious: sue German coal-fired power producer RWE for its part in helping to drive catastrophic climate change. Few thought the case would last as long as it did, and when the court issued its historic ruling in May, headlines in major international papers reported it as a loss. What they missed is that Lliuya had succeeded in laying a blueprint for others looking to take fossil fuel companies to court.

When the court’s decision was handed down on 28 May 2025, while the judges didn’t require RWE to pay up for the dam, they did side with Lliuya on all the key questions of law. The ruling held that German courts do have authority to hear civil claims for climate harms arising from impacts from climate change. A Peruvian could, in fact, sue in German courts under the law of nuisance if it could be shown a German had caused harm to his property – even if said property was on the other side of the world. This was partly due to provisions within German law that require neighbors to consider how their actions affect each other, ruling “the plaintiff is not obliged to tolerate” a disturbance to his property. It also rejected any suggestion Lliuya was “co-responsible” for potential harm simply by living in an at-risk area.

In other words, says Petra Minnerop, a professor of international law at Durham university, the decision means that someone in Tuvalu whose home is affected by sea level rise, or a person in Pakistan whose home is destroyed in a catastrophic flood could potentially sue for climate harms – within certain limits.

https://drilled.media/news/Peru-RWE


#news
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quick poll, please share:

what do you think is a fair price for an alpha/vertical slice of a sandbox game?

for context, this game is about ~hacking the planet~. there’s a command line, and a procgen/simulated internet, chat, forum, etc. with npcs (and maybe eventually a multiplayer, idk). the initial release (which is the price i’m asking about here) would have the command line and internet, but only a few commands and a few types of machines, basically just a tech demo of the engine. the final release would have tons of commands and machines and npcs to contend with, and it’d prolly be $30-$45.

i’m not concerned with making the most money: this game will be available for free from my site, maybe even playable in your browser if i can figure that out. i’m only concerned with giving people who want to pay a place to do so, and an amount that will feel to them like a fair value for the work i put in.

so: thoughts on a fair price for the alpha?

27% $5
45% $10
18% $15
9% $20
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I wonder how hard it’d be to move the data from beets to navidrome tbh, both use a sqlite database, and it’d probably be possible to cross reference things like MBIDs to find the right tracks

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@ticky there’s a bunch of beets plugins that allow importing play counts from places, but I’m not sure if it can actually write them in a way accessible and understandable to navidrome

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music server update: hooked slskd up to the whole thing, because sometimes finding the thing you want in the usual places is hard, plus this library is the exact kinda thing I’d wanna expose on soulseek

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update: I’m finally actually trying zotify, and barring some auth issues (not a zotify specific thing, it affects anything that uses librespot, and I already encountered it at some point) and ratelimit issues (mitigated by using a fork and the right delay), it seems to Just Werk :D

RE: https://league.adamski2003.lol/objects/a38fec7e-7b06-43d0-ad2b-18edd02d696c

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@Sacchihikaru according to the archiveteam wiki article, it happens when it can’t get a response from a trpc endpoint

I somehow never encountered it, but I can absolutely see how annoying it’d be

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@triangle-dog services like tunemymusic probably won't really cut it for me, my library is pretty massive AND includes a whole lot of niche stuff that pretty much ensures I won't be able to find some stuff on alternative services supported by those kinda things (or, worse, will hit false positives), that's why I was thinking of just writing my own Thing that cross references a bunch of music databases to get as many reliable release links as possible, hopefully ones that are easier to download from (and I might still do it at some point)

zotify seems like it could work well enough though, I'll def check that one out
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Edited 3 months ago

does anyone know a (preferably command line) spotify downloader that’s a) good and b) not just a youtube music downloader that happens to be able to use spotify metadata? I’m trying to get out of spotify’s iron grip (got navidrome running and I’m already importing tracks with beets, it’s pretty dang neat), but as it turns out, I have A Lot of spotify playlists that I’d ideally like to migrate, but getting the correct audio for stuff is gonna be a nightmare if I can’t find or engineer a good solution (I can handle the playlist metadata itself, I’ll just duct tape some code together to generate that)

I have no idea how ban happy spotify is with that stuff, but I don’t mind potentially burning a spotify premium account, I could get a fresh account and a free trial for this

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@progressivejpeg thanks! seems like it doesn’t have the Polish exams, but it’s definitely still gonna come in handy

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thinking of getting a ham radio license, because Why Not

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@Sacchihikaru I’m 100% double timing that archival script I only recently had a chance to get back to

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but also yeah I think queer online expression is gonna be extremely fucked up in the next few years, de facto and de jure prohibitions on porn, and queer people being targeted as inherently harmful in exposure.

It is gonna Be Bad and I am afraid that everything is just gonna be massively fucked

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@muffinlord that is a Certified Windows Moment™

I’m running arch, and it’s currently using 10 gigs of physical memory plus 4.2 gigs of zram (backed by an additional 1.3GB of physical memory) while running a bunch of software plus compiling things in the background

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@spdx_wl yknow, there’s a copy in my steam family, I gotta try it out. it does seem like smth that’d be right up my alley

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@niss yesn’t, the ![alt text](image url) markdown syntax does work on the akkoma frontend, but it doesn’t on some other instance types/frontends

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