VitoCola

@vitocola
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Cosa c’è scritto nel QRCode del Green Pass. Come decodificarlo per guardarci dentro.

https://dday.it/redazione/39870/cosa-ce-scritto-nel-qrcode-del-green-pass-come-decodificarlo-per-guardarci-dentro

Cosa c’è scritto nel QRCode del Green Pass. Come decodificarlo per guardarci dentro

Cosa c'è scritto dentro il grosso QRCode che accompagna il GreenPass? Che informazioni ottiene uno che lo scansiona? Per vederlo basta decodificarlo, ed ecco come si può fare.

CUBA IN RIVOLTA. Un altro punto di vista | mi Caribe

Da una decina di giorni Cuba è tornata ad occupare la pagina "esteri" dei maggiori mass media italiani e internazionali, ma anche delle sezioni di tanti blog, a

mi Caribe
Un gruppo di giovani ebree ed ebrei italiani, in questo momento drammatico e di escalation della violenza, sentono il bisogno di prendere la parola e dire #NotInOurNames, unendosi ai compagni e compagne attivisti in Israele e Palestina e al resto delle comunità ebraiche della diaspora che stanno facendo lo stesso.

L’azienda petrolifera italiana, maggiore inquinatore del nostro paese, viene assolta dal Tribunale di Milano dall’accusa di aver pagato “la tangente del secolo”.

https://www.dinamopress.it/news/eni-limpunita-dello-parallelo/?utm_source=rss

Eni, l'impunità dello stato parallelo - DINAMOpress

Rivelazioni inquietanti colpiscono l’azienda petrolifera italiana, maggiore inquinatore del nostro paese, mentre la stessa viene assolta dal Tribunale di Milano dall’accusa di aver pagato “la tangente del secolo”

DINAMOpress
Saudi Government Introduces Philosophy Into Its High Schools - Daily Nous

Last week, the Ministry of Education in Saudi Arabia announced that it is adding a philosophy course to its secondary school curriculum. Prior to this, philosophy had been wholly absent from education at all levels in Saudi Arabia. The course is called “Critical Thinking and Philosophy” and will be part of the nationwide high school curriculum, which is mandated by the Saudi Ministry of Education. The government has contracted with DialogueWorks, a British educational consultancy focused on philosophy, to train teachers for the course. I asked one person familiar with this development why the teaching of philosophy hadn’t been allowed before in Saudi Arabia. He said, “There is no official statement of the reason, but there used to be a stigma around philosophy in Saudi Arabia. Some religious people think it is in conflict with Islamic traditions, so it must not be taught. They are the same people who were against women’s driving. Now, the government is ‘socially’ more open-minded, so they allowed women to drive for the first time last year, and this year allowed teaching philosophy.” Hassan Alsharif, a graduate student in philosophy at the University of Kansas (who appears to be the first person ever from Saudi Arabia to have pursued a PhD in philosophy*), is interviewed about the introduction of philosophy into the Saudi Arabian high school curriculum here (in Arabic). In an email, he says, “I’m so happy that my country is getting more open-minded to other intellectual works, especially philosophy.” *UPDATE: This turns out to not be correct. Ahmed Alenaizan writes: “Dr. Nader Alsamaani (a Saudi professor in Qassim University in Saudi Arabia) has earned his PhD in philosophy from the University of Birmingham in the UK; he was supervised by Professor Yujin Nagasawa. I personally am pursuing a PhD in philosophy at the University of Connecticut.”

Daily Nous
How To Change Your Facebook Settings To Opt Out of Platform API Sharing

UPDATE (3/30/18): We have updated this post and its screenshots to reflect how Facebook reorganized and removed some settings this week.You shouldn't have to do this. You shouldn't have to wade through complicated privacy settings in order to ensure that the companies with which you've entrusted...