2026-04-08
Horseshit
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How Plausible Is 'Project Hail Mary'? Astrophysicists Have Thoughts
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Is It Possible That the Oldest Stone Tools on Earth Were Not Made by Humans?
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How a blind man made it possible for others with low vision to build Lego sets
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LED bulbs can damage paintings
The researchers are keen to stress that not only Van Gogh’s paintings, but also paintings by the French master Paul Cézanne contained both stable and unstable types of chrome-yellow paint.
celebrity gossip
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Wireless Festival cancelled after government stops Kanye West entering UK
We're now hearing reaction from the prime minister, who says rapper Kanye West "should never have been invited" to headline Wireless Festival. He says in a post on X that the government "stands firmly" with the Jewish community, adding that it would not stop in its fight to defeat "the poison of antisemitism".
Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering
Musk
Electric / Self Driving cars
Religion / Tribal / Culture War and Re-Segregation
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Poison Ivey: Chicago Bulls Release Forward After He Speaks Out Against Pride Month
Many of us were offended by social media postings by Ivey in referring to Catholicism as a “false religion.” He also drew the ire of many by telling a fan that “God does not hear your prayer if you are a sinner.” However, it appears that it was his criticism of the LGBTQ community and Pride Month that ended the matter with the NBA. Ivey objected to the advocacy required by the NBA, objecting “they proclaim it. They show it to the world. They say, ‘Come join us for Pride Month,’ to celebrate unrighteousness.”
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A star scientist showed that better genetics lessons could reduce racism
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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Netflix Launches Free Kids Gaming App to Compete with Apple Arcade
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Deere Settles Class Action Right-to-Repair Lawsuit
Reuters reported on Monday that “U.S. agriculture equipment maker Deere on Monday agreed to pay $99 million into a settlement fund for farms and farmers that are part of a class action over costs and access to repairs. The case is part of broader scrutiny in the U.S. over so-called right-to-repair practices, with regulators and plaintiffs arguing that some manufacturers limit competition by controlling access to repair tools and software.” “The settlement fund covers eligible plaintiffs who paid Deere’s authorized dealers for repairs to large agricultural equipment from January 2018, according to a document filed on Monday in the federal court in Chicago, Illinois,” Reuters reported. “In the settlement, Deere also agreed to make available to farmers for 10 years ‘the digital tools required for the maintenance, diagnosis, and repair’ of large agricultural equipment, including tractors, combines, and sugarcane harvesters, the filing showed.”
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Say no to a 'camera on your face', says Meta smart glasses rival
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Apple approves drivers that let AMD and Nvidia eGPUs run on Mac
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Mass. lawmakers looking to usher in 'most restrictive' social media ban in USA
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
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China is winning one AI race, the US another – but either might pull ahead
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As Meta Flounders, It Reportedly Plans to Open Source Its New AI Models
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OpenAI, Anthropic, Google unite to combat model copying in China
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The Cult Of Vibe Coding Is Insane - by Bram Cohen
You’re still building the infrastructure of things like plan files (That’s fancy talk for ‘todo lists’), skills, and rules. The machine works very poorly without being given a framework. So pure vibe coding is a myth. But they’re still trying to do it, and this leads to some very ridiculous outcomes. For example, a human actually looked and saw a lot of duplication between them. Now, you might ask: why didn’t any of the developers just go look for themselves? Again, it’s vibe coding. Looking under the hood is cheating. You’re only supposed to have vague conversations with the machine about what it’s doing.
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OpenAI Calls for Robot Taxes, Wealth Fund, and 4-Day Workweek As AI Disrupts Jobs
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Tech companies are cutting jobs and betting on AI. The payoff is not guaranteed
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AI Company Clones Musician's Voice, Then Copyright-Strikes Her Own Songs
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Telegram's AI Silently Rewrites Your Political Opinions. I Extracted the Proof
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LLM may be standardizing human expression – and subtly influencing how we think
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Anyone can code with AI. But it might come with a hidden cost
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Only 28% of AI infrastructure projects pay off, survey finds
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"The problem is Sam Altman": OpenAI Insiders don't trust CEO
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Anthropic Claims Its New A.I. Model, Mythos, Is a Cybersecurity ‘Reckoning’
Neo Gambling / Crypto con games
Economicon / Business / Finance
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Delve Scandal Just Keeps Getting Worse
A Y Combinator-backed compliance startup that raised $32 million at a $300 million valuation has imploded amid explosive allegations of “fake compliance as a service.” Delve (delve.co), which promised AI-powered SOC 2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, and GDPR certifications in days instead of months, now faces accusations of pre-generating auditor conclusions, using copy-paste templates for nearly identical reports, routing clients through Indian “certification mills” disguised as U.S. firms, and fabricating evidence of controls that never existed.
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Global Fuel Shortage Pushes Governments Toward Demand Controls
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Goodbye, middle managers. Hello, 'player-coaches' and 'org leads'
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The upper middle class is now the largest income group in the U.S.
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Exploring the impacts of California's minimum wage for fast food workers
“Based on what we’ve found, I think this legislation is a classic case of ‘no good deed goes unpunished,’” Owen said. “There are unintended consequences and knock-on effects, and overall, I think the results have definitely not been as positive as policymakers had been expecting.”
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Oracle hires new CFO with $950K salary as thousands face layoffs
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Sony Pictures Entertainment Layoffs Underway as Studio Refocuses
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Tech companies are axing roles. They're hiring some back as contractors
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The Wealthy Investors That Powered Private Credit Are Rushing for the Exits
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
Trump
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Trump says 'a whole civilization will die tonight' if Iran does not make a deal
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Trump says a 'whole civilization will die tonight' if Iran deal isn't reached
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Trump says 'a whole civilization will die tonight' ahead of deadline for Iran
In recent days, the president has made a series of escalatory threats against Tehran, threatening to bomb the country into the “the Stone Ages,” and calling the Iranian government "crazy bastards" while demanding it open up the key shipping route.
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Trump agrees to suspend 'bombing and attack of Iran' for 2 weeks
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Trump agrees to 2-week ceasefire if Iran opens Strait of Hormuz
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Trump suspends Iran attack for two weeks, subject to Hormuz Strait opening
Donald Trump has announced, via his Truth Social account, that there will be a two-week ceasefire with Iran, subject to "complete, immediate, and safe" opening of the Strait of Hormuz. He said that Iran has proposed a 10-point peace plan — he called the plan significant but "not good enough" on Monday — and he now believes it's "a workable basis on which to negotiate." The two-week ceasefire period will allow an agreement to be finalized.
- And the cries of "TACO!" are already loud... It wasn't about bombing Iran or not, it was about seeing Trump lose; so it has to be pitched as "he lost" regardless.
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The J6 Pipe Bomb Update You Don't Want to Miss
You may recall a story published by The Blaze last December that accused a former Capitol police officer, now an employee of the CIA, of dropping the two pipe bombs found in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 6, 2021. The Blaze retracted the story when the aforementioned suspect, Shauni Kerkoff, lawyered up with a law firm, Clare Locke, which allegedly charges $1,800 per hour, and began to threaten a lawsuit, even though she failed a polygraph test. The two journalists who wrote the article, Joe Hanneman and Steve Baker, remained working for The Blaze, but that fell apart this weekend after The Blaze allegedly fired them over "censorship" issues. Baker took to the internet to declare that he and Hanneman, now "free of corporate media censorship," are able to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth as they have found it to be regarding the person who placed the bombs near the Democratic Party and GOP headquarters.
Left Angst
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Trump dilemma for US officers: disobey orders or commit war crimes
Donald Trump’s threats to carry out mass bombing of civilian infrastructure in Iran present US military officers with a dilemma: disobey orders or help commit war crimes. It is an urgent matter for the US chain of command. In an expletive-laden threat, Trump set a Tuesday 8pm Washington time deadline for the Iranian government to open the strait of Hormuz or face “Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one”.
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When War Crimes Rhetoric Becomes Battlefield Reality
President Trump has repeatedly threatened to obliterate such infrastructure without regard to the law’s high demands. His comments are blatant expressions that he is willing to turn the United States into a rogue State like Iran and Russia, one that rejects the fundamental legal restraints that protect innocent non-combatants like children, and the Iranian civilian population itself.
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Trump is 'calling for a nuclear strike,' former White House comms director says
"Wake up: he is calling for A NUCLEAR STRIKE. Seek his removal immediately," Anthony Scaramucci wrote on X. Scaramucci served as the White House communications director for 11 days back in his first term.
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(PDF) Impeaching Donald J. Trump for High Crimes and Misdemeanors
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Bipartisan calls to remove Trump from office grow over Iranian 'genocide' threat
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(Video) Artemis astronauts refuse to talk to Trump
- If that didn't give the NASA budget a kick in the balls, nothing will.
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ICE arrested more than 800 people after tips from US airport security agency
Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security
External Security / Militaria / Diplomania
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Trump confirms U.S. sent guns to Iranian people, but says intermediary kept them.
President Donald Trump on Monday indicated that the U.S. had attempted to send guns to the Iranian people to help them fight the Islamic Republic's armed forces, but that the intermediary that was supposed to distribute the weapons merely kept them instead. "We sent some guns," he said. "They were supposed to go to the people so they could fight back against these thugs. You know what happened? The people that we sent them to kept them." "So, I am very upset with a certain group of people and they're gonna pay a big price for that," he added. Trump previously told Fox News's Trey Yingst that he believed Kurdish groups had kept the guns intended for the Iranian people. Kurdish militia forces had been the subject of speculation over a possible role in a ground operation against Iran.
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Iran attempting cyberattacks against U.S. critical infrastructure
World
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Australia's most decorated soldier charged with committing war crime murders
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Germany Power Prices Turn Deeply Negative on Renewables Surge
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Brazil puts BYD on list of shame for workers' past slavery-like conditions
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Europe's rearmament meets reality: the story of a failed frigate project
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Cambodia unveils a statue of famous landmine-sniffing rat Magawa
Iran / Houthi
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
China
Health / Medicine
Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp
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- The Science has settled all the way to the bottom of the barrel.
Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda
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Global human population has surpassed Earth's sustainable carrying capacity
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Brazil, India and Russia hold large reserves of rare earth but don't mine them
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Health benefits of Paris climate goals could save lives by 2040
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One of Earth's Most Explosive Volcanoes Is Quietly Refilling with Magma
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Bahamian Sharks Test Positive for Cocaine & Painkillers in New Study.
