2026-04-24
Worthy
-
Netflix Was Held Together with Duct Tape
The companies you admire were held together with duct tape on day one. All of them. Amazon was Bezos packing books in a garage. Airbnb was two guys renting out air mattresses because they couldn’t make rent. The polished, professional, inevitable-looking version of those companies didn’t exist yet. It got built later, slowly, by people who were embarrassed by what they had but shipped it anyway. The reason this matters... founders today are comparing their messy, unfinished, embarrassing day-one company to other companies’ day-3,000 versions. And then wondering why they feel like frauds. Stop doing that.
Netflix didn’t become Netflix because we had a vision. We became Netflix because we shipped a deeply imperfect thing on April 14th, 1998, and then spent the next 28 years finding out what it was.
etc
-
the attempt on Sam’s life, while apparently colored or shaped to some degree by the broader AI conversation, is not unique to the technology industry. American culture, which has grown more deliriously in favor of violence for years, has finally arrived at the point where that word, “violence,” is no longer sufficient. What we’re really talking about, specifically, is assassination, as the figure of the “‘good guy”’ killer is now very much ascendant, and our country, shaped by the psychotic contours of the internet, is now very much inside a new assassination culture. There’s frankly nothing we can do about this at the moment, and my intention here is not to solve the problem. But I do hope we can get a good majority of my fellow professional talking assholes on the internet to face the truth, which is that every single public figure in the country, including every one of us, is in legitimately mortal danger.
- It seems just months ago that people were being removed from projects they had founded and led for decades because of their insensitive language... Where did the turn happen?
-
The Declining Driver's License: Good, Bad, or Both?
In 1983, nearly half of all 16-year-old Americans had a driver’s license. By 2022, that share had fallen in half to ~25%. Even at 18 years old the rate dropped from roughly 80% to 60% over the same period. This trend is real, decades-long, and expected to continue. I want to tell you this is good news, and I think it mostly is. But fewer licenses doesn’t mean more kids on bikes — it may just mean teenagers spending more time on screens and not going anywhere at all.
The current causes driving the rate down are well-known: insurance costs are punishing. A 16-year-old on a standalone insurance policy runs $6,000–$6,700/year before all other vehicle costs, The GDL requirements are big hurdles even if teens don’t cite them as the main barrier, and the cultural meaning of the license has eroded. A driver’s license used to mean you could finally go somewhere without asking your parents. That’s a weaker sell when everything comes to you (Uber, DoorDash, etc.).
Horseshit
-
Young Adult Bowel Cancer Deaths Concentrated in One Group, Study Finds.
over the last 30 years, the rise in colorectal cancer deaths in young adults occurred almost entirely among people without a four-year college degree. Of course, getting a college degree doesn't protect you from getting colon cancer. Rather, experts say it's a marker for other issues: People without degrees tend to earn less money, have poorer diets, exercise less and get less medical care.
-
Boston marathon's good Samaritan loses race time but wins plaudits
-
Banter is the last thing I want from a coffee machine. Yet here we are
-
Archaeologists find copy of Homer's Iliad inside ancient Egyptian mummy
-
A McDonald's cheeseburger is a better deal today than it was in 1948
celebrity gossip
Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering
Musk
-
SpaceX and Cursor have explored a team-up with Mistral to take on AI rivals
-
Elon Musk's court battle with Sam Altman exposes Silicon Valley secrets
-
Elon Musk admits that Tesla vehicles won't get unsupervised FSD
-
The unflattering secrets revealed so far in Elon Musk's latest legal feud
-
Tesla's $25B spending plan tests investor faith in unproven AI bets
Robot uprising / Humanioid Helpers
Religion / Tribal / Culture War and Re-Segregation
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
-
Linux may get a hall pass from one state age bill, Congress plays hall monitor
-
Oshkosh council rescinds Flock camera contract after 'false statements'
-
Tim Cook Calls Apple Maps Launch His 'First Big Mistake' as CEO
-
Surveillance vendors caught abusing access to telcos to track people's locations
-
NCSC's first gadget blocks malware transfer over HDMI cables
SilentGlass is the NCSC's first branded device to hit the market. Announced publicly on Wednesday, the HDMI and DisplayPort-compatible device has already been deployed across "government estates," for several years and is capable of protecting "most high-threat environments." we are reliably informed that beyond the information included in the NCSC's blog, these devices are equipped with hardware that identifies malicious traffic in the data channel, blocking the transfer between computer and display. We're also told that the SilentGlass gizmos are threat-agnostic, meaning they are capable of detecting any kind of nastiness and preventing it from reaching and ultimately altering or manipulating a display. Anything potentially malicious that travels between HDMI or DisplayPort connections and a monitor is blocked. You might be thinking "it's not every day we hear about monitors being pwned via HDMI," and you'd be right. You wouldn't be alone either. Since the NCSC announced SilentGlass, infoseccers have taken to social media to question the need for this device.
-
YouTuber 'invisible' to America's army of cameras with anti-surveillance device
-
Microsoft launches 'vibe working' in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint
TechSuck / Geek Bait
-
from the Moon and the asteroid belt to other planets. In these environments, delay isn’t just an inconvenience. It fundamentally affects how networks behave. Long round‑trip times have serious consequences for protocols like TCP, which rely on a steady stream of acknowledgements (ACKs) to manage sending rates, estimate delay, and trigger retransmissions. Marc has been working on simulating the effects of extremely long delays using Earth‑based virtual hosts and software. His approach uses the Linux TUN device, TC‑NETEM, and code developed by his team. This setup allows them to programmatically define experiments that introduce delay, loss, and packet reordering, with packet‑in‑flight times that can span hours. It also makes it possible to study how switches, routers, and other intermediate elements behave in an end‑to‑end IP exchange.
- Self-sync, bursting type protocols will be required I think. Consideration of just what kinds of exchanges can happen at these distances is needed too: We're not gonna see a lot of web crawling happening over them. Design for what can be done, not what we do elsewhere.
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
-
What Have We Dumped on the Moon?
- Saw comments saying we shouldn't go back until we have cleaned all that up and "restored the pristine Lunar environment"
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
-
Meta tracking employee keystrokes on Google, LinkedIn, Wikipedia for AI training
-
A Boy That Cried Mythos: Verification Is Collapsing Trust in Anthropic
-
Congressman Introduces Bill to Ban AI Chatbots in Children's Toys
-
Anthropic has surged to a trillion-dollar valuation on secondary markets
-
AI discriminates by age: study finds bias in 5 popular chatbots
-
The Billionaire Math Geek Who Turned AI into a Money-Printing Machine
-
Google exec says almost every big studio uses AI, but not all disclose it
-
Anthropic has surged to a trillion-dollar valuation, overtaking OpenAI
-
White House warns of 'industrial-scale' efforts in China to rip off U.S. AI tech
Neo Gambling / Crypto con games
-
A hair dryer broke Polymarket and made someone $34000 richer
-
A hair dryer at a Paris airport broke Polymarket weather markets
-
French weather service alerts police after suspicious Polymarket bets
-
Freak Heat Spikes Pay Big on Polymarket, Rousing Weather Nerds' Suspicion
-
'Hairdryer used to trick weather sensor' to win $34,000 Polymarket bet
-
France probes suspected weather sensor tampering after Polymarket bets
-
French police probe suspected weather device tampering after odd Polymarket bet
-
-
DOJ arrests soldier who made $400k betting on Maduro's removal
-
US special forces soldier arrested after allegedly winning $400k on Maduro raid
-
DOJ: Soldier Used Classified Info to Profit from Prediction Market Bets
-
US Soldier in Maduro Raid Is Charged with Making Bets on Former Leader's Ouster
-
US Special Forces Soldier Arrested for Polymarket Bets on Maduro Raid
-
Soldier Used Classified Information to Bet on Maduro's Ouster
-
-
Why prediction markets are a sure sign that our civilisation is in decay
Prediction markets route around normative argument without destroying it; they provide a parallel answer, priced and continuous, that makes the unpriced conversation feel slow and unserious by comparison. Why listen to a journalist reason about whether the ceasefire will hold when you can see that it's trading at 34 cents? Prediction markets render deliberation as probability, and once rendered, public questions are managed as probability, and the deliberation that produced the question vanishes - the argument for why the question matters vanishes too.
-
NY sues Coinbase and Gemini to halt unlicensed prediction market businesses
Economicon / Business / Finance
-
Starbucks expansion in Nashville brews bitterness in Seattle
-
The Factor Behind Your Home Insurance Cost: Your Credit History
-
TSMC Delays Use of ASML's High-NA EUV Machines over Cost Concerns
-
Microsoft Offers Voluntary Retirement to About 7% of US Workers
-
Finra Adopts New Standards to Replace the Day Trading Margin Requirements
-
'CAR' crash: Avis Budget stock plunge reminding some on Wall Street of GameStop
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
Trump
-
Trump administration reclassifies cannabis as less dangerous
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche on Thursday changed the classifications of products containing marijuana that are covered by the Food and Drug Administration or that have received a state medical-marijuana licence. They will move from a Schedule I narcotic like heroin to a Schedule III drug - on par with Tylenol with codeine. He also called a hearing to consider reclassifying all marijuana.
-
White House accuses China of 'industrial scale' theft of AI technology
Left Angst
External Security / Militaria / Diplomania
-
Secretary of the Navy John C. Phelan is departing the administration, effective immediately. Undersecretary Hung Cao will become Acting Secretary of the Navy.
-
Pentagon wants $54B for drones, more than most nations' military budgets
World
-
Denmark chooses Europe's Patriot rival for air defence system
-
Healthy mother to end life in Swiss clinic after grief at losing son
-
High Street mini-marts selling cocaine, cannabis and prescription drugs
-
Medical data of half a million Britons listed for sale on Chinese website
-
Germany unveils strategy for becoming Europe's strongest military by 2039
-
Millions of Americans may now also be considered Canadian under new law
-
Iran war revives European rooftop solar demand to cut energy bills
-
Mastodon receives 614,000€ of public money for public code from German agency
-
Cyber agencies share fresh advice to defend against China-linked covert networks
-
Bikes keep Honda afloat, yet even that business is under pressure
-
France confirms data breach at government agency that manages citizens' IDs
-
France Keeps Breaking the Internet to Stop Piracy, Even Though It's Not Working
-
Some Interrail travellers told to cancel passports as hacked data posted online
-
Slovenia to air films about Palestine instead of Eurovision song contest
Iran / Houthi
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
Health / Medicine
Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp
-
High-Dose Flu Vaccine Linked to Lower Dementia Risk
- Now if they could just make it consistently link to a lower flu risk
Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda
-
Texas launches $750M plant, targets growing New World screwworm threat
-
98% of all recent environmental claims can be categorized as "greenwashing"
-
Why drawing eyes on food packaging could stop seagulls stealing your chips
-
Oldest known recording of a whale song could unlock mysteries of the ocean
-
The end of oil? As fuel shocks cascade, 53 nations plan a fossil fuel phaseout
-
The no-go zone paradox: Chornobyl's wildlife thrives amid pro-nuclear shift
