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@alavi

1. Please go to Settings -> Preferences -> Other -> Filter Languages
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#Mastodon #Feditip

[2 of 2]
The Indian Context

Besides immediate economic and health impacts due to climate changes in India, I foresee that migration will have a serious and long term effect on Indian society. From the Wikipedia article "Climate change in India":

> By the year 2050, India is expected to witness a significant increase in climate-related displacement, with around 45 million people compelled to migrate from their homes due to climate disasters. This number is three times higher than the current count of individuals being displaced because of extreme weather events.

Climate migrants can also become political refugees depending on the prevailing political situation. Author Shreya Singh in the publication "Climate Migration and Displacement: Challenges and Responses" (Feb 2024) and author Mala Balaji in the publication "Climate-induced displacement: A new normal for India's vulnerable communities" (July 2023) provide deep dives in this topic. Since these environmental migrants are not regarded as refugees in the traditional sense, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) has noted the need for a broader definition of the term "refugee."

Such displacements can have negative impacts on social well-being, economic stability, and environmental sustainability, causing countries to experience severe setbacks in all areas of development. Human rights violations, a worsening of already-existing disparities, the fast urbanisation and resulting resource shortage, and threats to national and regional security are a few of these effects.

References:
1. Global Hotspots of Climate-related Disasters (June 2024): https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212420924002504
2. Climate change in India: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_change_in_India
3. Climate Migration and Displacement: Challenges and Responses (Feb 2024): https://www.icwa.in/show_content.php?lang=1&level=3&ls_id=10543&lid=6710
4. Climate-induced displacement: A new normal for India's vulnerable communities (July 2023): https://climateconnection.org.in/updates/climate-induced-displacement-new-normal-indias-vulnerable-communities

#ClimateCrisis #ClimateRefugees #MastodonIndians #MastIndia #India

[1 of 2]
How many of us are affected due to climate change?

As per the journal publication "Global Hotspots of Climate-related Disasters" (June 2024) [1] climate-related disaster events directly impacted over 44 % of the global population in 2020. The climate related disasters are drought, riverine flood, tropical cyclone, flash flood, land slide and mudslide, wildfire and heatwave. Droughts have affected the most people, with over 1.4 billion, followed by riverine floods, which have affected more than 1.2 billion. The percentage of the population impacted understandably decreases with an increase in Human Development Index.

Climate-related disasters affected substantially less people in European countries than in Australia, Africa, North America, Asia, and South America. The low percentage of individuals harmed by climate-related disasters in countries with high levels of Human Development Index, as well as in European countries, could be attributed to people's ability to execute adaption techniques.

Climate-related disasters have touched more than 100% (cumulative percentage) of people in 19 nations, indicating that vast numbers of people in certain countries, particularly in the Caribbean, Africa, and Asia, have been affected year after year. This recurring impact most likely indicates that adaptation efforts in those countries have fallen short in assisting people and ecosystems to adjust to climate change.

Due to 205 climate disaster related events (mostly riverine flood, heatwave, flash flood and land slide) in India between 2000 and 2020, more than one billion Indians were impacted. India ranked 131 out of 189 countries in the Human Development Index in 2020 and 134 in 2022.

1. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212420924002504

#Climate #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #HumanDevelopmentIndex #MastodonIndians #MastIndia #India

@frankie

The extra charges for international transactions will be due to debit card or credit card or PayPal related usage. Filen works well in India. So does Internxt.

If you keen to pay in Indian rupees, then you may consider MEGA (mega.io) or DigiBoxx for your review.

Filen (@[email protected])

22 Posts, 0 Following, 767 Followers · Affordable zero-knowledge end to end encrypted cloud storage made in Germany.

Fosstodon

Digital Arrest is the fastest growing cyber crime in India.

Dec 23, 2024

1. A 39 year-old Bengaluru software engineer fell prey to a digital arrest fraud recently and ended up losing ₹118 million (~1.4 million USD).

2. Bengaluru woman duped of ₹3 million (~35K USD) in digital arrest scam; forced to break FDs and empty bank accounts.

3. A 32-year-old home-maker from Pune was scammed of ₹3.3 million (~38.7K USD) by fraudsters who posed as officials from the Mumbai police and the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI). The criminals intimidated her by claiming she was under “digital arrest” for alleged misuse of a SIM card issued in her name.

Dec 26, 2024

1. A Japanese national working in Bengaluru lost ₹3.55 million (~ 41.6K USD) to cyber fraudsters, who posed as Mumbai Police officers and placed him under "digital arrest", alleging his involvement in a money laundering case.

The term "Digital Arrest" describes a kind of sophisticated cyber fraud in which scammers use video conversations, emails, or text messages to pose as government or law enforcement officers. They coerce victims into making significant financial transfers or disclosing private information by threatening to arrest them or take legal action against them for supposed crimes including drug trafficking, money laundering, or internet fraud. In India, people reportedly lost about ₹1200 million (about $14 million) as a result of these frauds in the first quarter of 2024 alone.

Digital Arrest is not a legitimate legal concept and does not exist under Indian law.

Reference: https://www.deccanherald.com/india/explained-what-is-a-digital-arrest-scam-3250891#1

#MastodonIndians #MastIndia #India #CyberCrime #CyberAttack #DigitalArrest

Explained | What is a 'digital arrest' scam?

In a 'digital arrest', victims are tricked into remaining under constant visual surveillance via Skype or other video conferencing platforms until the criminals’ demands are met.

Deccan Herald

@raptor85

Your thoughts are echoed in the article (July 2107) titled "This Is How Your Fear and Outrage Are Being Sold for Profit" by Tobias Rose-Stockwell [1].

He also written a book (July 2023) titled "Outrage Machine: How Tech Amplifies Discontent, Disrupts Democracy―And What We Can Do About It"

1. https://tobiasrose.medium.com/the-enemy-in-our-feeds-e86511488de

cc: @gedeonm

#BigTech #Democracy

This Is How Your Fear and Outrage Are Being Sold for Profit

The world feels more dangerous. Our streets seem less safe. The assault on our values is constant. The threats feel real. One evening in late October 2014, a doctor checked his own pulse and stepped…

Medium

@funhouseradio

I do not appreciate the idea of Bluesky discovering users for me though algorithms. In Mastodon, I use options like explore and live feeds of a given instance to find new users. I am responding to your post though this approach.

In Akkoma and Sharkey I have similar interesting choices like local, bubble, global etc. to connect with new users.

I follow hashtags and can also follow related new users as and when required. In Sharkey, the antennas provide a nice feature to follow hashtags outside the regular Home timeline.

I am yet to understand why it feels convoluted to discover and follow new people in Fediverse.

https://fedidb.org/

#Fediverse #Hashtag

FediDB, Fediverse Network Statistics

FediDB is a cutting-edge service providing detailed statistics and insights into the Fediverse network.

@funhouseradio @mattixmash

This valid observation must be addressed by client software for Mastodon, Akkoma, Pleroma, Sharkey etc.

I do not use any app. I use a browser and open links in a new tab to avoid this problem. In Bluesky there is no need for a new tab. One returns where they left after clicking on the profile of a new user.

myrmepropagandist has interesting Fediverse advice [1] regarding (a) following more and more real persons if their posts are good, (b) boost posts and replies, and (c) write thoughtful replies.

In addition, I strongly advocate usage of hashtags in posts and also following hashtags. We may just write thoughtful posts without caring about reach and visibility. Good posts will find relevant audience.

I have learnt in the hard way that beyond 3000 characters, the probability of a Fediverse post being read is low.

In this context, I must highlight a quote by John Stuart Mill (1806 - 1873). This quote encourages individuals to embrace their right to free expression and to engage in respectful and constructive dialogue with others.

> "Every man who says frankly and fully what he thinks is so far doing a public service. We should be grateful to him for attacking most unsparingly our most cherished opinions."

1. https://sauropods.win/@futurebird/113458638836376645

#Fediverse #FreeExpression #SocialWeb #Hashtag

myrmepropagandist (@[email protected])

My Fediverse Advice: * Follow more people. No, even more people than that. Basically, if you find a real person and their posts are good follow 'em * If you get a good reply to a post boost it. If you make a good reply to a post boost it. Replies are not visible in the feed unless you do this. As long as the post is an OK start to a conversation or interesting boost it. * Write thoughtful replies. And if you put effort into a reply boost it or probably only the people tagged will see it.

Sauropods.win