2026-04-12
Horseshit
-
Torqued-loop Sharrow propeller hits breakthrough in production scaling
-
Families Spent Decades on Louisiana's Bayous. The Power Company Pulled the Plug
-
Efficacy of front-of-package nutrient labels: a randomised controlled trial
-
The power of headwear and 'hatiquette' in early modern England
-
Sure, there were a few monsters who fell into the early internet because it offered them a chance to torment strangers at a distance, but they were vastly outnumbered by the legion of Tron-pilled nerds who wanted to make the internet better because we wanted all our normie friends to have the same kind of good time we were having. The point of this is that there were lots of people back then who had the capacity to imagine the kind of gross stuff that Zuckerberg, Musk, and innumerable other scammers, hustlers and creeps got up to on the web. The thing that distinguished these monsters wasn't their genius – it was their callousness. When we brainstormed ways to break the internet, we felt scared and were inspired to try to save it. When they brainstormed ways to break the internet, they created pitch-decks.
-
For Chinese visa-seekers in the US, the path to good fortune lies in Chick-fil-A
Musk
Religion / Tribal / Culture War and Re-Segregation
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
-
Unionized ProPublica staff are on strike over AI, layoffs, and wages
-
Meta boots law firm ads seeking clients to sue over alleged FB, IG addiction
-
Rockstar Games Hacked, Hackers Threaten a Massive Data Leak If Not Paid Ransom
-
Apple Stops Accepting Orders for Some Mac Mini and Mac Studio Models
-
Amazon Luna Will No Longer Allow Owners to Buy Games, Access Game Stores
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
-
Anthropic loses appeals court bid to temporarily block DoD ruling
-
Sam Altman speaks out after alleged attack on SF home,links to rising AI anxiety
-
Startup Wants You to Pay Up to Talk with AI Versions of Human Experts
-
We're heading for an AI-fueled 'dementia crisis,' brain scientist warns
-
Anthropic temporarily banned OpenClaw's creator from accessing Claude | TechCrunch
-
Karpathy says developers have 'AI Psychosis.' Everyone else is next
-
AI scans 72,585 suicide reports, finds emotional distress may precede 90% of deaths.
Neo Gambling / Crypto con games
Economicon / Business / Finance
-
Apple Is Closing a Unionized Store in the U.S. and the Union Is 'Outraged'
-
VC Money and Israel Outrage Derailed a Hot Hollywood Startup
-
Meta is set to pay its top AI executives almost a billion each in bonuses
-
Iran war volatility is driving oil trading boom on Hyperliquid, says JPMorgan
-
Jet Fuel Crunch Is Getting Severe with No Reprieve in Sight for Airlines
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
-
It Was Worse Than We Thought: Kristi Noem’s Husband Saga Gets Darker
the Daily Mail obtained dozens of recordings and messages revealing that Bryon Noem had had a secret nine-year online relationship with a left-wing dominatrix named Shy Sotomayor, who works under the name Raelynn Riley.
Sotomayor recalls being surprised that he chose a female name so similar to that of his wife, Kristi, who is known for drastic changes in her own appearance, or so-called MAGA makeover, before and during her 13 months in Trump's Cabinet. ’I was just jaw to the floor, thrown for a loop that he wanted to be called that, so close to her name, when he could have gone with Stephanie or something,' she said. Once they reconnected last fall, Sotomayor said, it became clear that her client wanted frequent, near-daily sessions with an intensity that far exceeded their earlier correspondence. Their conversations in November alone cost him about $7,600, she noted.
Their conversations continued through Kristi's Senate hearings and the ICE shootings in Minneapolis. They kept going past March 5, when President Donald Trump fired Kristi from the Cabinet, and their last contact came March 22, when Sotomayor finally drew a line; his neediness had worn her out.
Left Angst
World
-
France's government is ditching Windows for Linux, says US tech a strategic risk
-
Japan's cabinet approved a bill classifying crypto as a financial instrument
-
Brazil seizes over 1,100 weapons and 1.5 tons of drugs from US, says official
Brazil's tax revenue secretary Robinson Barreirinhas said on Friday that more than 1,100 weapons were seized over the past 12 months arriving from the United States, and that in the first quarter alone authorities have seized more than 1.5 tons of drugs. Brazil has begun feeding a system with data on weapons entering Brazil from the U.S., Barreirinhas said during the announcement of a Brazil-U.S. action against organized crime.
-
EU should regulate Big Tech, not banning kids from social media, Estonia says
-
Canada's Liberal party adopts motion to restrict kids from social media
-
Hero rat who sniffed out over 100 land mines is honored with giant statue
