2026-06-19
etc
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There have been 4 major plane crashes in the US in 4 days. What is going on?
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America 250 Commission Seals 900-Pound Time Capsule for 2276
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How the Glorious Revolution crushed the NIMBYs
Today, the Glorious Revolution is remembered for having introduced the system of constitutional monarchy, which subordinated the power of the monarch to Parliament. What is really interesting, though, is how Parliament used its new power: to untangle excessively strong and complex property rights, making it possible for the first time for sustained investments to take place in infrastructure and agriculture across England. And unlike in most other political revolutions, this happened almost entirely peacefully and with the consent of the people whose rights were being redrawn.
Horseshit
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Americans have never been healthier or more alone. Might these things be related
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Ultra-rare Star Wars Lego collection went missing, sparked viral conspiracies
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South Korea's Fake Online Stores Help Shopping Addicts Save Money
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How to Become a Person After Smartphones Have Rotted Your Brain
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SF landlord killed tenant to clear Sunset home for sale, lawsuit alleges
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The personal life of Charlemagne, the first Holy Roman Emperor
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Orgasmic meditation company founder gets 9 years in prison in forced labor case
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Hunter-gatherers in Siberia died of a plague outbreak 5,500 years ago
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Qantas plans a 22-hour London-Sydney nonstop flight, set for October next year
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Why I spent $50K to marry myself, after being cheated on by jerky men.
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You don’t understand, prices can’t go down
Since 1980, the economy has grown at 2.6% per year. The stock market has grown at 12.3% per year. Compounded, that’s 3.3x vs 220x. Does this make any sense? It does once you realize that prices can’t go down. That’s simply not allowed. It’s bad for business if prices go down. The economy might collapse if prices go down. And if prices do go down, it shouldn’t happen while our administration is in power. This is America, the land of number go up. That’s why people around the world trust our economy.
celebrity gossip
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The founder of Craigslist has given away half a billion dollars
- Or, looked at another way; he's spent that much on religious goals which he didn't want to dirty his own hands with.
Musk
Electric / Self Driving cars
Robot uprising / Humanoid Helpers
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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CBC will no longer air NHL games in 'end of an era' as broadcast deal expires
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Apple 'Records Every Tap' in App Store to Filter Personalized Recommendations
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Windows and Linux users: The deadline to update Secure Boot keys is near
Machines that fail to update the Secure Boot-related keys will continue to function, but they will no longer be protected against new UEFI threats. To be clear, they were already vulnerable to new UEFI threats that exploited the industry-wide LogoFail vulnerability. The key refresh is designed to mitigate that risk and prevent unrelated UEFI attacks that may arise in the future.
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Google told researcher 'Nice catch!' Then denied bug bounty for flaw it still hasn't fixed
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Meta Tapped a Pentagon Supplier to Prototype Face Recognition for Its Glasses
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Florida's TikTok lawsuit could signal wider social media crackdown
TechSuck / Geek Bait
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What Ever Happened To The Hero Nerd?
The only thing that identified Matthew Broderick’s character in WarGames as anything other than a normal teenager in 1983 was the fact that he had a computer in his bedroom and knew how to program it. Steve Guttenberg played a heartthrob roboticist in Short Circuit, and they really screwed the curve up for the rest of us when they cast Val Kilmer as a laser prodigy in Real Genius. The nerds even started to find love, and one wonders how many young men spent their evenings furiously flipping switches on the front panel of their IMSAI 8080 in hopes that a breathless Ally Sheedy might appear in their doorway with an urgent mission that needed their unique expertise. I don’t know about anyone else, but I still haven’t given up hope.
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The History of the First IoT Device
before there was even a modern Internet — there was a humble Coke machine in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania that could report its contents through a network. Though it was primitive by today’s standards, it holds a unique distinction: It was, as far as anyone knows, the world’s first IoT device. Necessity, as always, was the mother of invention. One day in the early 1980s, David Nichols, a graduate student in Carnegie Mellon University’s computer science department, was in his office on campus at Wean Hall craving a soda. But his office was “a relatively long way” from the building’s Coke machine, and considering his fellow students’ substantial caffeine habits, Nichols knew there was a good chance it would be empty — or that, if the machine had recently been refilled, the sodas inside would be tragically warm. “I never used it, except to see if it was working,” Kazar told Industrious. “I never liked Coke.”
- Ideas implemented by the unconcerned, for no identifiable benefit, with no concern for privacy or property rights... Sounds like "IoT" today.
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Stop making swap partitions, use swap files instead!
Swap files have had the same performance characteristics as swap partitions for more than 20 years and yet, linux distributions continue to encourage the use of swap partitions during install.
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
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Claude Fable 5 suspension: Anthropic exec says it may return in the coming days
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Trump admin blocking Fable 5 rerelease unless Anthropic ensures no jailbreaks
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JPMorgan Chase cuts off Anthropic access for its Hong Kong staff
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Anthropic asked for regulation. Washington went much further.
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Anthropic employees accuse Trump Administration of targeting them.
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The Korean Telecom Giant at the Center of Anthropic's Mythos Controversy
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Amazon employees say they're facing termination for backing data center limits
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Meta head of product for 'AI for work' transformation is leaving company
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SmarterChild, Long before ChatGPT, a generation learned how to talk to machines
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AI reshapes global labour market into two distinct paths, rewarding human skills
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The Cloud Has Sound: The Unrelenting and Unseen Cost of A.I. Data Centers
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World leaders want American AI. They just don't want America to turn it off
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Midjourney Medical goes from AI image generation to full-body ultrasounds
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Microsoft Makes Big AI Inroads in China by Selling OpenAI Models
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The Teachers Getting $50k Bonuses Thanks to a Meta Data Center
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Europe must choose between AI and climate goals, data center lobby says
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AI will create more jobs for humans, not replace them says Jeff Bezos
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Tech Workers Maxed Out Their A.I. Use. Now They're Trying to Minimize It
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Student Cheating Is Becoming Impossible to Detect in an A.I. Era
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Gig workers are endlessly exploited. AI could make more of us share their fate
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Fed regulators order grid operators speed power to energy-hungry AI data centers
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Writing with AI demands more thought from students, not less
Neo Gambling / Crypto con games
Economicon / Business / Finance
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
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Georgia Republicans scrap redistricting talks before special session begins.
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We Could Have Had Cell Phones 40 Years Sooner
The basic idea of the cellphone was introduced to the public in 1945 – not in Popular Mechanics or Science, but in the down-home Saturday Evening Post. Millions of citizens would soon be using "handie-talkies," declared J.K. Jett, the head of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Licenses would have to be issued, but that process "won't be difficult." The revolutionary technology, Jett promised in the story, would be formulated within months. But permission to deploy it would not. The government would not allocate spectrum to realize the engineers' vision of "cellular radio" until 1982, and licenses authorizing the service would not be fully distributed for another seven years. That's one heck of a bureaucratic delay.
Trump
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Spy world panic as Tulsi Gabbard prepares to unleash bombshell file dumps
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has a week left in office, but her enemies are bracing for her final act before she concludes her unique 16-month leadership that strained the intelligence community. Gabbard’s final bow, the Daily Mail can reveal, is expected to be the public release of secret intelligence documents surrounding COVID-19 origins, gain-of-function research, and Anthony Fauci's coverup of the pandemic's origin. She is also planning additional transparency surrounding the CIA's MKUltra mind-control program.
Democrats
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Whipping the Democrats into Shape
The upcoming midterms are likely to be essential for the perpetuation of democracy in the United States. It is largely unspoken, but most understand though many won’t admit, that if the Democrats do not take control of most likely both the House and Senate in November then the chance for any sort of peaceful transfer of power in 2028 from Trump to a potential Democratic successor is vanishingly low.
Left Angst
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Ringleader of Plot to Blow Up UFC 250 Fight Is ‘NOT a Citizen.’
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It turns out that this was not evidence of the rise of racism but another possible hoax. Lu bizarrely claimed that he was unaware that a burning cross had racist connotations and insisted that there was no racist message intended. Others suspected that this was a type of false-flag effort to outrage the left. Johnson later denounced the incident as a “symbol of hatred is one that we must continue to reject, and I wholeheartedly reject it. I can’t speak to anyone’s motives; I can only speak to the impact, and the impact was devastating.” It seems curious that Johnson would not “speak to motives” when he knows that this was set by a leftist radical.
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U.S. Demands to Access Africans' Data Raise Privacy, Sovereignty Concerns
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Crews battle algae bloom in Washington's newly repainted Reflecting Pool
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How Stephen Colbert's Replacement Is Helping Tank the Rest of CBS
External Security / Militaria / Diplomania
World
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Egypt – Syria undersea cable has been cut in a 'systematic sabotage campaign'
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Farage trying to block Britcoin plans that could be costly for billionaire donor
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EU introduces new agreement on air passenger rights after 13 years
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BBC to axe Radio 4's The World Tonight after more than 50 years
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"The Age of the Car Is Over": Fewer and Fewer Private Cars in Berlin
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Brexit tore apart European science – now the research rifts are healing
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France's Louvre museum 'running out of steam', new director says
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Rightwing MEPs have come under fire after they celebrated a vote aimed at increasing deportations across the EU with chants of “send them back”, leading other lawmakers to respond with cries of “shame on you”. The heated confrontation in the European parliament came on Wednesday after lawmakers voted 418 to 218 to approve controversial measures aimed at increasing deportations of undocumented people. The overhaul has been widely criticised by rights groups including Amnesty International France, which this week described the plans as “absurd, cruel and discriminatory”, and 16 UN experts, who recently outlined more than a dozen ways in which the rules could contravene international human rights.
Iran / Houthi
Israel
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
China
Health / Medicine
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HPV jabs cut risk of dying from cervical cancer before 30 to almost zero
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Second carcass-eating fly species cleared by FDA for maggot wound therapy
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Cannabis commercialisation not decriminalisation drives up usage, study finds
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Widely Prescribed Blood Pressure Drugs Could Be Harming Diabetic Kidneys
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Ozempic and Wegovy linked to surprising drop in violent behavior
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Does Coffee Count Toward Your Daily Water Intake? Here’s What Experts Say.
Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp
Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda
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World-famous Robin Hood oak tree has died
The Major Oak in the heart of Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire was thought to be up to 1,200 years old and has perished after its first spring with no leaves, according to the RSPB. The conservation charity, which manages the woodland, said it had been in decline for some time due to heatwaves, droughts, and high visitor footfall, which heavily impacted the surrounding soil.
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Bees regulate feeding to avoid over-consuming certain essential nutrients
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UK Environment Agency threatens to prosecute campaigner after waterway cleanup
