2026-01-28
Horseshit
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Is It Dangerous to Let Kids Be Free?
The ministry, Crook argued, was asking him to increase his children’s risk exposure. And they were doing it in the name of safety. The conversations, he says, went nowhere. When Crook spoke statistics, the social workers spoke vibes. Didn’t he just know his kids were too young to be left alone? In desperation, Crook asked the query that weighed heaviest on his mind: Had he done anything illegal? A social worker explained that questions of legality weren’t the only issues at stake. The ministry was enforcing a guideline, not an actual law—but in practice, that distinction seemed to make little difference. To Crook, the message was clear: We don’t necessarily think you’re a criminal. But we still might think you’re a lousy dad.
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Anti-pop and an alien sigil: how Aphex Twin overtook Taylor Swift
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Sepp Blatter suggests fans should not travel to US for World Cup
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US to send ICE agents to Winter Olympics, prompting Italian anger
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The daring idea that time is an illusion and how we could prove it
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Alex Honnold and Netflix Team Up for a Corporatized "Free Solo"
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Six Psychological Flaws That Keep the Gifted from Living Up to Their Gift
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Gen Z is the first generation less cognitively capable than their parents
Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering
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California probes TikTok over claims it censors anti-Trump content
The Democratic governor of California, Gavin Newsom, has announced an investigation into claims TikTok has censored content which is critical of the Trump administration. A deal was concluded last Thursday to split off the US operation of the app - three days later thousands of American users began reporting problems including seeing "zero views" on new posts. Many also reported being unable to see political posts, such as content criticising the shooting by federal agents of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis on Saturday.
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TikTok investigating why some users can't write "Epstein" in messages
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TikTok censorship claims spark probe of app's handling of anti-Trump content
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Celebrities say they are being censored by TikTok after speaking out against ICE
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US ownership of TikTok off to a rocky start as outage continues into second day
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TikTok users can't upload anti-ICE videos. The company blames tech issues
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TikTok Data Center Outage Triggers Trust Crisis for New US Owners
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California's Newsom accuses TikTok of suppressing content critical of Trump
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TikTok claimed bugs blocked anti-ICE videos, Epstein mentions; experts call BS
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At Davos, tech CEOs laid out their vision for AI's world domination
- As opposed to the wellborn idle rich laying out their vision for world domination, as the venue was intended to host.
Musk
Electric / Self Driving cars
Robot uprising / Humanioid Helpers
Religion / Tribal / Culture War and Re-Segregation
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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Surveillance companies track smartphone users through advertising data
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Meta to test premium subscriptions on Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp
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TikTok alternative Skylight soars to 380K+ users after TikTok US deal finalized
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Hasbro is being sued for printing too many Magic: The Gathering cards
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VR's problem isn't friction, it's a lack of meaning: Lessons from $70B in losses
VR has been “five years away” for thirty years. In the 90s, virtual reality would revolutionize everything: gaming, communication, entertainment, work. In the 2010s, the Oculus Rift changed the game; for real this time. In the 2020s, the metaverse was coming because Zuckerberg bet the company on it, which made it inevitable. After billions invested, multiple hype cycles, and genuine technological breakthroughs, VR remains largely where it’s always been: a promising technology that most people don’t actually use. The headsets got better, the ecosystem grew, but mainstream adoption hasn’t materialized.
VR’s biggest limitation isn’t technical; it’s imaginative. Most VR development is informed by experience from game development or film, bringing assumptions from those mediums. We need people from disparate fields who understand human experience from different angles. Look at what worked: Beat Saber succeeds because someone understood kinesiology and rhythm entrainment. VRChat succeeds because someone understood identity, creative expression, and community formation. VR therapy succeeds because someone understood psychology and embodiment. The developers who’ll define VR’s next decade won’t just know Unity or Unreal. They’ll be informed about human psychology, kinesiology, sociology, and spatial design. They’ll look to immersive theater for presence and participation, LARP for embodied roleplay, escape rooms for collaborative problem-solving, and theme park rides for visceral experience.
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Meta, TikTok and YouTube face landmark trial over youth addiction claims
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Nudify apps found on Google and Apple's app stores
- surely we'll see the prompt world wide attention and regulatory action that prompted?
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LG's new subscription program charges up to £277 per month to rent a TV
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CBS News Hires New Contributors As Part Of Bari Weiss’ New Strategy For News Division
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Zotac warns component shortages threaten the 'survival' of GPU manufacturers
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Supreme Court to decide how 1988 videotape privacy law applies to online video
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"IG is a drug": Internal messages may doom Meta at social media addiction trial
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
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No matter what we do, the coming wars will be horrific. Billions will die. But that’s what is beautiful; diversity is messy. On a cosmic scale, this period is just a blip, it isn’t what matters. What matters is that diversity survives, that life survives. That there’s entities that are different, all competing for different goals. All dancing between cooperate and defect. This is probably how it has to be anyway, I don’t think our actions can influence this one way or another. But lets not be so foolish as to cheer for the bad outcome.
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Anthropic’s secret plan to ‘destructively scan every book in the world’
- Can't they just use Google Books data?
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Anthropic launches interactive Claude apps, including Slack, other tools
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Sam Altman said OpenAI planning to 'dramatically slow down' its pace of hiring
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Gamers suspicious of AI content have forced developers to cancel titles
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OpenAI spills technical details about how its AI coding agent works
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Estonia bets on artificial intelligence to offset demographic decline
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Microsoft Pledged to Save Water. In the A.I. Era, It Expects Water Use to Soar
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Zuckerberg blocked curbs on sex-talking chatbots for minors court filing alleges
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
Crypto con games
Economicon / Business / Finance
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Goldman's Solomon Sees 'Slower' Trajectory for Talent Growth
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Pizza Hut Staff Assaults Zomato Delivery Boy Over Low Ratings
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Cartels that pretended to make the market have broken? What is driving gold's relentless rally
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Newegg stock price falls 17.7% after Chinese owner is detained by authorities
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Pinterest laying off 15% of workforce in push toward AI roles and teams
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Amazon will pay customers $309M to settle 'no hassle returns' lawsuit
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UPS to cut additional 30,000 jobs in Amazon unwind, turnaround plan
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Hedge funds are tapping prediction markets and their data for an edge
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UnitedHealth forecasts first revenue drop in nearly four decades; shares plunge
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
Trump
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Greg Bovino Loses His Job - The Atlantic
Gregory Bovino has been removed from his role as Border Patrol “commander at large” and will return to his former job in El Centro, California, where he is expected to retire soon, according to a DHS official and two people with knowledge of the change. Bovino’s sudden demotion is the clearest sign yet that the Trump administration is reconsidering its most aggressive tactics after the killing Saturday of 37-year-old Alex Pretti by Border Patrol agents under Bovino’s command. Earlier today, President Trump appeared to signal in a series of social-media posts a tactical shift in the administration’s mass-deportation campaign. Trump wrote that he spoke with Minnesota Governor Tim Walz—whom the White House has blamed for inciting violence—and the two men are now on “a similar wavelength.” Tom Homan, the former ICE chief whom Trump has designated “border czar,” will head to Minnesota to assume command of the federal mobilization there, Trump said.
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Seems Kind of Funny How All the 'Organic' Cockroaches Scatter When the Signal Light Comes On
Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan (suspected as “Flan”) deleted her Facebook account amid speculation she’s directly linked. If true, this ties straight to state government involvement in what looks like organized insurrection. This wasn’t just leaks—it was a live operation disrupting a Minneapolis agitator network funded by shadowy orgs and possibly foreigners.
Left Angst
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From World Police to Local Fortress: The End of American Internationalism
The US appear to take a step back, with the National Security Strategy explicitly mentioning the undoing of previous overextension and the necessity to dedicate a higher focus to internal subversion. The America First policy increasingly seems like preparation to defend against something. Whether that is a propaganda strategy to justify the current internal chaos or a real international threat, I do not think us laymen can know right now. What is increasingly clear, and very concerning, is that the current narrative in the US walks and quacks like an authoritarian duck.
- America steps back from enforcing its rules over the rest of the world; and it is interpreted as an expansion of authoritarianism. Because someone told these people it was, and to contradict what they've been told would make them as much an enemy of their tribe as the Trumpist Americans.
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As Tech Chiefs Woo Trump, Silicon Valley Seethes over Minneapolis Shootings
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Scott Galloway Explains How You Can Stop Government Overreach
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Not one penny - by Scott Sumner
As I got older, I studied economics and learned that big cold places are a fiscal drag with little military value, manned space flight is mostly a waste of time and money, and the minerals in asteroids are of little value.
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Bill Clinton issues statement following latest immigration-related shooting | Fox News
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AI videos of fake NYPD–ICE clashes spread in a 'perfect storm' for propaganda
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Introducing the Actual Grassroots Lefty Group Helping Organize the Insurrection
found no evidence that CrimethInc receives grant money from any of the usual foundations, no corporate sponsors, no investment income (so presumably no large sums tucked away), and no government or NGO funding. CrimethInc appears to be genuinely grassroots. It also appears to be small and mostly informal. There's a small publishing nucleus — materials like their To Change Everything anarchist's guide — surrounded by a larger, loose, decentralized ecosystem of contributors and adopters. Their conferences, according to GPT, sometimes attract between 200 and 300 attendees. What's maybe most interesting to readers is that while CrimethInc is genuinely grassroots, they don't exactly indulge in any transparency.
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'ICE Is Going Too Far': OpenAI's Altman Weighs in on Minnesota
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DHS: Critical ICE Surveillance Footage from Abuse Case Was Never Recorded
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ICE watchers in Maine say they were threatened by federal agents
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U.S. government has lost more than 10k STEM PhDs since Trump took office
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Trump's use of AI images pushes new boundaries, further eroding public trust
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New US defense strategy downgrades Europe, elevates Greenland
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Trump aides declared 16 DHS shootings justified before probes completed
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Trump's cyber chief uploaded sensitive files into a public version of ChatGPT
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Meta Is Blocking Links to ICE List on Facebook, Instagram, and Threads
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The sad and self-inflicted decline of the Washington Post, in one chart
There’s nothing wrong with personal liberties and free markets; I’m a fan of these things myself. Perhaps an explicitly centrist or center-right outlet could be a good business if it were starting from scratch; this is arguably something of a blind-spot even as the center-right has been hollowed out, either joining Team MAGA or Team Democrat. But it’s understandable that many subscribers felt betrayed. The Post rebuilt its brand from subscribers who wanted unflinching coverage of Trump, and then it pulled the rug out. And it doesn’t provide as much coverage in areas ranging from culture to real estate to Wordle that have long been profit centers for the Times. And now it’s paying the price for that.
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'You can't have guns. You can't walk in with guns,' Trump says of Pretti killing
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ICE knocks on ad tech's data door to see what it knows about you
Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security
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California tech CEO and electric vehicle pioneer arrested, accused of murder
After identifying the victim as 58-year-old Newport Beach resident Aryan Papoli, officials arrested a suspect — her estranged husband, 66-year-old Rolling Hills resident Gordon Abas Goodarzi. Authorities contacted Goodarzi at his home and arrested him on Jan. 23, the news release said. Goodarzi, a California tech executive with ties to BattleBots, is publicly listed as the president and CEO of Magmotor, which describes itself as a “proud” supporter of the combat robot community and claims to support several teams each year. According to his LinkedIn, Goodarzi also previously worked as a research affiliate at UCLA’s B. John Garrick Institute for the Risk Sciences since 2023.
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LA homeless services CEO arrested for defrauding taxpayers for luxury lifestyle
External Security / Militaria / Diplomania
World
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EU Tightens Grip on WhatsApp, Raising New Free Speech Concerns
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Police chatbots in UK could free up equivalent of 3k police officers
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UK authorities help seize 'narco sub' and record cocaine haul in Atlantic Ocean
British police have helped seize a record nine-tonne haul of cocaine from a "narco sub" in the Atlantic Ocean. The mammoth seizure weighed nearly as much as a school bus and the sub was 230 nautical miles from the Azores when it was intercepted. The semi-submersible eventually sank before authorities could take all its cargo, sending 35 of the 300 packages to the bottom of the Atlantic. The boat came from Latin America and had three Colombians and a Venezuelan on board, police said.
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Uber drivers are freelancers, not employees, Amsterdam Court of Appeal rules
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EU now has its own 'secure and encrypted' satellite communication system
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African nations now send more money to China than they receive in new loans
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Spain approves decree to regularise half a million undocumented migrants
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TikTok settles just before social media addiction trial to begin
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France to ditch US platforms for 'sovereign platform' amid security concerns
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
China
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The Inverted Panopticon: China Weaponized the West's Own Wiretap Infrastructure
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Zhang Youxia: Purge of China's top general leaves military in crisis
The senior ranks of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) are in tatters. The weekend purging of China's top general, Zhang Youxia, and another senior military officer, Gen Liu Zhenli, has left serious questions about what triggered the elite power struggles unfolding in the country - and what this means for China's warfighting capacity, whether it be any ambition to take Taiwan by force or engage in another major regional conflict. Zhang, 75, was vice-chairman of the Central Military Commission (CMC) - the Communist Party group headed by the country's leader Xi Jinping, which controls the armed forces. The CMC, usually made up of around seven people, has now been whittled down to just two members - Xi and Gen Zhang Shengmin. All others have been taken down in the "anti-corruption" crackdown following previous waves of detention.
Health / Medicine
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Embracing sauna culture can lower dementia risk and boost brain health
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South Korea's Edenlux set for U.S. debut of eyestrain wellness device
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Strong vs. swole: the surprising truth about building muscle
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Brain bran: The protective effect that fibre has on cognition
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Ancient infection disabled gene in chimp brains that remains expressed in humans
