2025-01-17
stuff depletion, protocol churn, terrorgram sanctions, unreal ivory towers, expensive games, NY inter-not, remember Transmeta and UUCP, rockets go, bye Biden, smoke the FDA, watchband bloodletting
LA Fires
Horseshit
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Australian Open resorts to animated caricatures to bypass broadcast restrictions
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A gate to stop overeager 'Sex and the City' fans from trespassing
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After over 50 years, Boston area's only typewriter store is closing
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The Editors weaves Wikipedia’s volunteers into a global suspense tale - Ars Technica
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Stuff we already depleted • Carlos Roldán
- as long as we define "depleted" such that it includes things that are not in fact hard to come by
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Peloton should stop charging secondhand fees and undermining product ownership
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Genetics, not shared envs, drives parent-child similarities in intelligence
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U.S. Military Service Is Strongest Predictor of Carrying Out Extremist Violence
Obit
Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering
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These initiatives, just by existing, are evidence in letters of fire 500 miles high, evidence of people noticing something important: Corporately-owned town squares are irreversibly discredited. They haven’t worked in the past, they don’t work now, and they’ll never work. Something decentralized is the only way forward. Something not owned by anyone, defined by freely-available protocols. Something like email. Or like the Fediverse, which runs on the ActivityPub protocol. Or, maybe Bluesky, where by “Bluesky” I mean independent service providers federated via the AT Protocol, “ATProto” for short.
TikTok
Musk
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Elon Musk crackdown on researchers who revealed he isn't Adrian Dittmann
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Tesla boycott is gaining momentum in Germany due to Musk's meddling in politics
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French group encourages mass departure from Elon Musk's X platform
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Ask HN: How can X suspend paid accounts without explanation?
- The suspended me a month after i paid, just before the election. Other services removed me around then too.
Electric / Self Driving cars
Religion / Tribal / Culture War and Re-Segregation
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"LinkedIn Catfish" Created a Fake Profile to Expose Racial Inequity in Hiring
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Sanctioning of global white supremacist terrorism group rattles U.S. members
The State Department has applied the “specially designated global terrorist” designation to the Terrorgram Collective in a groundbreaking move that for the first time sanctions a transnational white supremacist terrorist group with a significant presence in the United States.
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Objective Reality May Not Exist at All, Quantum Physicists Say
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
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Almost all of academic science has moved away from actual (empirical) science. It is higher status to work on theories and models. I believe that it is closely related to well documented scientific stagnation as theory is often ultimately sterile. This tendency is quite natural in academia if there is no outside pressure… And is the main reason why academia should be ruthlessly judged by practitioners and users. As soon as academia can isolate itself in a bubble, it is bound to degrade.
Society must demand actual results. We must reject work that is said ‘to improve our understanding’ or ‘to lay a foundation for further work’. We must demand cheaper rockets, cures for cancer, software that is efficient. As long as academic researchers are left to their own devices, they will continue to fill the minds of the young with unnecessary models. They must be held accountable.
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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Mullenweg's Grip on WordPress Challenged in New Court Filing
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Apple's interoperability efforts aren't meeting spirit or letter of EU law
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Microsoft ends support for Office apps on Windows 10 in October
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They stopped making hardware in this space 2yr ago: Intel's Tofino P4 Software Is Now Open Source
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some say more of a cult than a game: Billion-dollar video game: is this the most expensive piece of entertainment ever made? | Games | The Guardian
ne of the bestselling franchises, Call of Duty, saw costs balloon to $700m (£573m), a number only revealed recently when a reporter dug into court filings. There is, however, one game with a budget that is anything but secret. The sprawling multiplayer space simulator Star Citizen publishes its funds on its website and they are updated in real-time. Currently, they stand at $777,145,107 (a figure that will be out of date as soon as this article is published). Soon it’ll surpass $800m and, possibly in a year or so, breach the ceiling to become the world’s first billion-dollar video game.
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After shutting down several popular emulators, Nintendo admits emulation legal
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Intel and Nvidia drivers holding back a public SteamOS release, Valve not trying
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As Americans flock to RedNote, privacy advocates warn about surveillance
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AT&T kills home Internet service in NY over law requiring $15 or $20 plans
TechSuck / Geek Bait
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The Extremely Unprofitable Transmeta
From the start on the 3rd of March in 1995, the company was incredibly secretive. NDAs were the rule of the day, and the company was so secretive that some of the faculty at Stanford referred to it as the cult, a perception not helped by the enthusiasm and excitement of the company’s employees. Part of this secrecy was likely due to where their first funding came from. While Ditzel aimed for a VLIW chip that would do dynamic binary translation from x86 to his new architecture, DARPA provided money for research into cryogenic electronics. While this early work was unrelated to the products that Transmeta eventually made, I cannot help but think that this early work may have led to the low-power consumption and great thermals that Transmeta later achieved. The provable reason for secrecy was an abundance of caution. Transmeta’s first patent was filed in 1996, and it wasn’t approved until 2000. Only after that did the company’s products launch.
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from 1975. beats anyone i ever heard of. First business card with an email address?
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Forgotten Internet: UUCP | Hackaday
In 2012, a Dutch Internet provider stopped offering UUCP to the 13 users it had left on the service. They claimed that they were likely the last surviving part of the UUCP world at that time.
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
Crypto con games
Economicon / Business / Finance
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FTC sues Deere, alleging equipment repair 'monopoly' raises costs for farmers
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Walgreens says locking up products to prevent shoplifting hurts sales
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Hino Motors, a Toyota Subsidiary, to Pay $1.6B to Resolve Emissions Fraud Scheme
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Walgreens replaced fridge doors with smart screens. It's now a $200M fiasco (Archive)
Walgreens had already tried to pull out of the deal and get rid of the doors, blaming what it says was glitchy hardware and software. But Cooler Screens had temporarily prevented their removal the prior June by suing Walgreens for breach of contract, seeking $200 million and demanding its screens stay in place. Unreported until now is that over the ensuing months of legal battling, during which Walgreens had countersued for monetary damages, Cooler Screens Chief Executive Officer Arsen Avakian decided to try a different form of pushback. On Dec. 14, Avakian’s team secretly cut the data feeds to more than 100 Walgreens stores in the Chicago area. The dozen or so smart doors affected in each of these stores either glazed over with white pixels or blacked out altogether. Customers could no longer see where the Coke and Red Bull and Hot Pockets and Heineken sat, and either assumed the fridges were out of order or found themselves rummaging through one by one.
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Goldman Sachs CEO says Apple card partnership may end before 2030
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Why are interest rates rising when the Fed has been cutting them?
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AmEx to Pay $108.7M for Deceptive Marketing and "Dummy" Account Information
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How Can a Major Bank Like Capital One Be Offline for 24 Hours?
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
Trump
Democrats / Biden Inc
Left Angst
External Security / Militaria / Diplomania
World
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TikTok, AliExpress, SHEIN surrender Europeans' data to authoritarian China
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Italy seeks to protect restaurants and hotels from fake and paid-for reviews
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Governments call for spyware regulations in UN Security Council meeting
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Age verification mandatory for porn sites in the UK starting July
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UK Officials Consider Banning Ransomware Payments from Public Entities
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Netherlands releases list of 425,000 suspected Nazi collaborators online
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
China
Health / Medicine
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Price-fixing-as-a-service: The claim against healthcare cost-cruncher MultiPlan
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FDA to Revoke Authorization for the Use of Red No. 3 in Food
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FDA moves to slash nicotine in cigarettes
Without nicotine, a cigarette is just smoldering leaves wrapped in some fancy paper. But if the Biden administration gets its way, that’s essentially all cigarettes will be. Today, regulators at the FDA announced that they are pushing forward with a rule that would dramatically limit how much nicotine can go in a cigarette. The average cigarette nowadays is estimated to have roughly 17 milligrams of the drug. Under the new regulation, that would fall to less than one milligram. If enacted—still a big if—it would decimate the demand for cigarettes more effectively than any public-service announcement ever could.
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(Apr 2023) Could Ice Cream Possibly Be Good for You? - The Atlantic
Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda
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Bloodletting recommended for Jersey residents after PFAS contamination
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Smartwatch bands can contain 'major' levels of toxic PFAS, study finds
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Google strikes largest biochar carbon removal deal with Indian startup Varaha
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Physicists Pinpoint the Quantum Origin of the Greenhouse Effect
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The largest vacuum to suck climate pollution out of the air just opened
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Colossal raises $200M to "de-extinct" the woolly mammoth, thylacine and dodo
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Sweden starts building 100k year storage site for spent nuclear fuel
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The utterly plausible case that climate change makes London much colder