One could read “double trouble” in this enormous example of graffiti, sprayed with bold precision on a walkway wall under an overpass in Vienna: both #FTP (fuck the police) and #ACAB (all cops are bastards/bad)—aka, cops always bring trouble, they don’t protect or defend people from it. And that’s a good and legit read, pointing in two acronyms or seven letters to the countless reasons why police must be abolished. Reform just paints a lighter shade of blue on the inherent brutality of policing.

Yet as a prefigurative-minded anarchist—and thus, it should go without saying, abolitionist—I feel it’s our task to always offer our own, nonhierarchical double trouble—the good kind of trouble aimed at shaking up this death machine of a social order via social critiques and social visions. That is, not merely asserting what we’re against (here, cops) but also, always, concurrently, proclaiming and especially experimenting with what we’re for (in this case, a world without police).

So in this #ArtOfResistance, I see the double trouble of a liberatory counternarrative: #FreeThePeople (FTP) and #AutonomousCommunitiesAreBeautiful (ACAB). I see glimpses across this imperiled planet—of which we humans are only one small (yet too often dangerous) part/guest—of how forms of freedom and self-governance, even in what might seem modest ways, are put into practice every day, including and especially these days, in using solidarity as a weapon (our best one) against the occupying, often militarized police forces trying to control too many cities and lands around the globe.

ICE in airports. Liberals believing TSA is somehow the downtrodden underdog. Increased numbers of cops now “guarding” Jewish and Muslim spiritual and community spaces in the United States and Europe in light of increased antisemitism and Islamophobia as an ugly impact of Trump-Netanyahu’s war machine, as if anyone’s safety comes from those in blue. Signs in hospitals asserting “violence against health care workers will not be tolerated … or we’ll call the police” on you, as if policing was somehow nonviolent or at least neutral. Militarized kidnapper cops and orange “safety vest” peace police. …

All to say, with a huge backlog of #ACAB, #FTP, and #1312 street-art images burning a hole in my “saved” photo collection, and with increasing ire (if that were possible) for how the world’s police—bad cops and “good” ones—are daily, second by second, murdering off life and cutting off possibilities, I’ll do my best to share at least one “no love for cops” rebel tag for the next seven days—this one seen recently in Vienna. After all …

You don’t hate Mondays, you hate cops. Doesn’t everyone?

@CoMaps @osm_fr I wounder if they could get hosted on halifax.rwth-aachen.de, one for the fastest #HTTP(S) + #FTP Servers in the #EU
CVE Alert: CVE-2019-25619 - Ftpshell - FTP Shell Server - RedPacket Security

FTP Shell Server 6.83 contains a buffer overflow vulnerability in the 'Account name to ban' field that allows local attackers to execute arbitrary code by

RedPacket Security

Fetch (с собачкой) почему-то с #FTP не работает: дальше приветственного сообщения — ничего, никакого списка файлов. А вот #Transmit от @panic заработал

#macOS9 #macMiniG4

Updated the blog and linkdump of my website.

The linkdump went without a hitch, but the blog was a little troublesome.

Lesson: Always use a dedicated FTP client, and dont use the ftp client of your filemanager

Also: the new flatpress update can now also run a mastodon plugin!

#webmaster #ftp #filezilla #blog #links

CISA flags Wing FTP Server flaw as actively exploited in attacks

CISA warned U.S. government agencies to secure their Wing FTP Server instances against an actively exploited vulnerability that may be chained in remote code execution attacks.

BleepingComputer
U.S. CISA adds a flaw in Wing FTP Server to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog

The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) adds a flaw in Wing FTP Server to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog.

Security Affairs