February 27, 2026 · View on web
These are the most widely shared links from across Mastodon and the Fediverse today — surfaced by Murmel from thousands of posts in the open social web. This is the Fediverse-wide view. Sign up to get a digest tailored to the people you actually follow.
jenniferplusplus.com · 39 people Worth reading
AI is meant to seem like magic. But there's no such thing as magic. It's all illusion. So, allow me to spoil that illusion for you.
“people can't sustain vigilant critical skepticism against what feels like a zip bomb targeting human attention”
— @garthk · Feb 26
theconversation.com · 100 people
Planned ‘megaconstellations’ of satellites could cause unforeseen harm to the ozone layer and climate systems. Global regulation is needed before it’s too late.
New article out about what a million satellites could do to our atmosphere. It's bad.
— @sundogplanets · Feb 26
theguardian.com · 57 people
A handful of companies monopolise the web, with unprecedented access to our data. But there are many more ethical – and often distinctively European – alternatives
For once, in an article looking at alternatives to Big Tech the Guardian has acknowledge (and indeed given a half a paragraph to) Mastodon....
Its not the greatest write up but might encourage some more people to join us...
— @ChrisMayLA6 · Feb 27
edri.org · 27 people
With final negotiations on the controversial CSA Regulation underway, you’d be forgiven for thinking that our digital rights are out of the woods.
EU’s Chat Control law is in the final stretch: countries dropped plans for mandatory mass scanning and explicit encryption backdoors, but “voluntary” scanning and broad risk rules remain on the table 📡
Age checks could tie private chats to IDs or face data, sidelining anonymous, secure communication for many people 🔒
🔗
#TechNews #Privacy #Security #Encryption #Surveillance #AgeVerification #EU #Europe #BigTech #AI #DataProtection #HumanRights #Freedom #Internet
— @knoppix95 · Feb 25
fediforum.org · 10 people
Some analysis and notes on the submissions, in the hope they may be helpful. No guarantee whatsoever that we didn’t miss anything important or misinterpreted what people were saying. Read the actual submissions instead.
Over 40 position statements is a lot to read. So we tried to create a summary for what the community thinks how to grow the Open Social Web:
But reading the actual submissions is probably more interesting:
Join us on Monday?
— @fediforum · Feb 25
theguardian.com · 32 people
Centuries-old wells restored to provide drinking water as parts of the country head towards “day zero” when no water will be available
Yikes. A country of 1.5 Billion people running out of water.
Ancient stepwells brought back to life as India begins to run out of water as parts of the country head towards “day zero” when no water will be available
“It was such a joyous moment to see water collecting into the stepwell after clearing 40 years of garbage,” says Hajira Adeeb, a 45-year-old resident of Bansilalpet, who grew up seeing the well become transformed from the community’s water source to a dumping ground. “I visit almost every day. The area is clean and lit up in the evenings. I enjoy sitting there.”
India is famed for its stepwells – multi-storey structures built to provide access to groundwater, with steps and platforms descending to the water level. Thousands were built across the country near natural aquifers – underground porous rock saturated with water – mostly between the 11th and 18th centuries.
— @exador23 · Feb 26
soatok.blog · 22 people
To understand my point, I need to first explain three different cryptography attack papers / blog posts. I promise this won’t be boring. Three Little Dislcosures Misuse-Prone Ciphers For All …
Cryptography engineering has an intrinsic duty of care.
— @soatok · Feb 25
modal.cx · 16 people
Modal is an independent collective building emancipatory software.
New blog post: Why "digital sovereignty" requires a free software alternative to Android and iOS, and how we're building towards that 🏗️
— @modal · Feb 26
quantamagazine.org · 15 people
In an 1874 paper, Georg Cantor proved that there are different sizes of infinity and changed math forever. A trove of newly unearthed letters shows that it was also an act of plagiarism.
'The Man Who Stole Infinity
In an 1874 paper, Georg Cantor proved that there are different sizes of infinity and changed math forever. A trove of newly unearthed letters shows that it was also an act of plagiarism.'WHAAT? Erst 152 Jahre damit durchgekommen? Wie krass ist das denn?
— @wackJackle · Feb 27
postmarketos.org · 30 people
Aiming for a 10 year life-cycle for smartphones
We have updated our AI policy to explicitly forbid generative AI. This and more in our latest monthly blog post "postmarketOS in 2026-02: generic kernels" :zoop:
— @postmarketOS · Feb 26
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