2026-07-16
Worthy
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Long, but worth reading entire: The OpenAI Bubble
The AI bubble isn’t a result of any actual return on investment — whether that be in purely monetary terms, like revenue or profitability , productivity gains, or anything tangible or measurable. Rather, it’s an episode of cult-like psychosis that infected the brains of some of the most powerful and wealthy individuals and institutions, where the powerful mythology of a company inspired — and been used to inspire — the greatest capital misallocation in history. As much as this’ll piss some people off, I fully believe that the only reason this has kept going so long is that OpenAI has yet to collapse. Its failure would be a watershed moment — the Lehman Brothers of the AI bubble, and an event that would define the end of one epoch, the start of another, and that would shake the afflicted out of that psychosis.
- I think it will be worse than this. We have too many people who firmly believe "AI knows all" to the point they will fight to keep it.
Horseshit
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Silicon Valley has a science fiction problem
In 2021, when Mark Zuckerberg announced Facebook’s rebrand to ‘Meta’, he took the name from Neal Stephenson’s novel Snow Crash (1992), which imagines the ‘Metaverse’: a virtual reality where people’s avatars navigate digital space. But Snow Crash is one of the sharpest satirical novels of the past half-century. Stephenson wrote it as a warning: his Metaverse is a consolation prize for a society that has collapsed. The federal government has disintegrated; corporate franchises govern daily life; even pizza delivery has been privatised into a Mafia-run operation. The novel’s protagonist is a pizza deliveryman and part-time hacker whose sword-fighting avatar in the virtual world is the only place where dignity is available to him. Stephenson intended the contrast between digital glamour and material poverty to be horrifying. He saw it as a cautionary vision of where platform capitalism leads. Zuckerberg’s presentation did not engage with any of this. The platform economy – where corporations are protected from democratic accountability while providing essential services – echoes Stephenson’s model precisely, and Zuckerberg read it as inspiration.
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Your lost dog can now call home with the world’s 1st satellite-connected dog collar.
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Physicists Have Argued over This Problem Since 1883. It May Now Be Solved
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T. rex named Gus sells for $50.1M to become the most expensive dinosaur
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Vacuum of the Imagination: Why Space Rockets Could Have Flown Centuries Earlier
- I would enjoy watching experiments along the lines he proposes here. from a distance.
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Florida woman receives unfortunate new license plate
The license plate reads “SQZ A55,”
Epstein
Musk
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Musk promises purge after Grok Build caught sending repos to the cloud
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SpaceXAI's Unpermitted Data Center Power Project Impacts Black Communities
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Elon Musk quietly buys a $1 billion gas turbine company to power Grok
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Musk: We will make the codebase of X open source, no exceptions
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SpaceX stock sinks for a second-straight day, nearing $135 IPO price
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SpaceX bond worth 10% less than issue price – heading for junk bond status
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Elon Musk Could Still Face Criminal Charges for Trying to Bribe Voters in WI
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What time is SpaceX's Starship Flight 13 launch on July 16?
Thursday, July 16. Liftoff is set for 6:45 p.m. EDT (2245 GMT).
Electric / Self Driving cars
Robot uprising / Humanoid Helpers
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1X's NEO Hand Is a Genuine Breakthrough. The Business May Not Survive It.
NEO is priced at $20,000 outright or $499 per month to lease. For context, robotic hands with comparable complexity typically cost $20,000 or more per hand on their own. DroidUp’s Moya, which uses a similar tendon-driven actuation system, is priced at over $160,000. Even Unitree’s G1 costs at least $30,000 for their capable models. 1X is almost certainly selling the entire NEO robot, with two of its most advanced hands ever built, at a substantial loss per unit.
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Birds aren't real: Winged robot "puffin" can fly starting from the water
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
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Florida student’s historic 11.99 GPA triggers district policy overhaul.
The high marks by Vaibhav Bhaskar, who is on his way to Duke University to study finance and economics, earned him a new state record, beating out the Sunshine State’s previous top 11.84 grade point average. Bhaskar’s course load included 44 advanced placement and dual college enrollment classes.
Because he took on such a massive volume of schoolwork, the combined weight of his classes pushed his GPA to an astronomical level. While Hillsborough County school officials praised Bhaskar’s achievement, they stressed that no student should be able to amass an 11.99 GPA. Principal Tiffany Ewell compared the loophole to an “arms race” that has since prompted the district to revise its policy.
Bhaskar expressed that he fully supports transitioning to a standardized approach, restricting GPA to a five point scale. He pointed out that “my 11.99 GPA on our district’s scale probably translates to a 4.93 on a standard 5.0 scale,” and reassured other students that “regardless of the scale, colleges will recalculate your GPA.”
- points for pointing out the stupidity of the system
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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Google and Epic stop fighting – third-party Android app stores coming next week
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Microsoft's Secure Boot has been broken for a decade and no one noticed
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clean your cookies when this happens: Facebook's desktop web page leaks multiple GB of memory
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Microsoft has released software updates to plug at least 570 security holes
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The Truth About Whether Meta's NameTag Face Recognition Tech 'Exists'
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
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Meta Sued for Allegedly Using Discriminatory AI in Layoff Decisions
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New York becomes first U.S. state to impose AI data center ban
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Google's AI search features pose 'unacceptable risk' to children
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German media regulator says Google's AI Overviews subject to German media law
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George Lucas says rejecting AI is like rejecting cars in favour of horses
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OpenAI and Anthropic warning about a future they're building at breakneck speed
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Nobel economists, tech leaders warn how AI could threaten jobs
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Job Hunters Are Using AI to Cheat in Interviews, and Failing at the Office
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CoreWeave considers derivatives to hedge against falling memory prices
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SoftBank's Son says AI will need $5T per year by 2040, dismisses bubble talk
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Chamath Palihapitiya says soaring AI token spend will hit companies' earnings
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Anthropic, Blackstone bet the next trillion-dollar AI business is implementation
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Vint Cerf is working on a plan to unleash AI agents on the open internet
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"Bailout" Most Americans now say the public should own half of the big AI companies
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Apple's lawyer mixed up Asian OpenAI employees before lawsuit
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OpenAI blames email mixup for why it didn't respond to Apple trade theft claims
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American AI is expensive. Some startups are turning to cheap Chinese models
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Microsoft CEO echoes Palantir CEO's warning on enterprise AI
Economicon / Business / Finance
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ASML reports -above guidance- €9.3B net sales and €2.9B net income in Q226
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Helsing's 'crazy' valuation raises defence tech bubble concerns
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How Brands Sneak in Cheaper Ingredients to Protect Their Profit Margins
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"Made in China" costs: Is this the end of the once-mighty GoPro?
ounder Nicholas Woodman is propping the company up by extending it a loan of his own money to the tune of $20 million, at an annual interest rate of 6.5%, while a buyer is desperately sought. It’s believed GoPro may not survive the year without a new owner or fresh injection of cash, with Woodman’s intervention acting as a stopgap rather than bail-out per se.
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Why truckers say the Gordie Howe bridge changes everything
The trucking industry estimates companies could save anywhere from $20,000 to $100,000 annually, depending on the size of their fleet and how often they cross the border.
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Y'all Street is here: The Texas Stock Exchange opens for trading
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Terrorized by a so-called "tech" company. When will they see justice?
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Over 400 CLOs Tabbed for Upgrade in Pivot That Fans '08 Fears
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
Trump
Left Angst
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Why I Am Suing Northwestern University—and the US Government
I am suing them because—as my attorneys and I have shown in our filing and as we will prove in court—they have robbed me of my “successful academic career and livelihood because of a joint project of Northwestern and elements of the federal government to manufacture consent for their participation in the Zionist colonial project in Palestine.”
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US to fund Trump-aligned Europeans building 'civilisational bonds'
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Federal Court Suspends Trump Immigration Policy Targeting Technology Researchers
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Purging Orwell will not halt the rise of the political right
Contemporary scholarship argues that preserving white dominance, rather than analysing interstate conflict, has been the foundational purpose of the international relations discipline. Many argue that race is constitutive of capitalism itself, and therefore central to understanding contemporary inequalities. Feminist scholars have made comparable arguments about gender. Critical approaches often prioritise identity and culture but, while valuable, this emphasis has often come at the expense of class-based explanations. George Orwell offers precisely what these trends overlook. His work contributes not only to critical theory but also to our understanding of contemporary political dynamics and systems of oppression.
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People in Many Countries Now View China More Positively Than the U.S.
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FCC to repeal 39% TV ownership cap in boost for Trump-friendly news orgs
Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security
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Welsh Doxbin admin jailed for egging on swatters from behind a screen
Terence G. Reilly, special agent in charge at the FBI Nashville Field Office, said: "Swatting is not a victimless prank – it is a reckless and dangerous crime that can have deadly consequences. "This investigation exemplifies the remarkable dedication of the FBI and our international law enforcement partners to pursue and bring to justice those who commit this dangerous crime – no matter where in the world they reside." Louisa Robertson, specialist prosecutor at the Crown Prosecution Service Cymru-Wales, said: "Callum Dare put people in danger by encouraging the triggering of armed police responses, for his own thrills.
External Security / Militaria / Diplomania
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Texas factory cost $469M using old equipment, makes zero artillery shells
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Defense industry’s major players gather in Pennsylvania as US weapon stockpiles hit new low.
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US Military smartphones targeted through roaming and ad tech
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Hegseth Orders Mandatory Testosterone Screening, Optional TRT for Troops 30
World
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UK plans default midnight social media curfew for 16- and 17-year-olds
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UK teens report sleep, wellbeing gains under social media restrictions, study
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TikTok policy chief reacts to EU safety measures to limit social media access
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Europe Takes Step Toward Possible Social Media Ban for Children
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New era for Gibraltar with removal of border controls with Spain
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Locksmith scams: 'I was shut out with my baby and charged £2,200 to get back in'
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Poland begins construction of €2.3B deepwater port on Baltic coast
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Can't English be considered an indigenous Indian language, asks Supreme Court
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Swiss Army Breaks with Microsoft: "Cyber Command" Relies on Open Source
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Brussels prepares fresh Google fines as Big Tech enforcement increases
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Another Day, Another Ban: Brussels Blocks Right-Wing Protest
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The digital euro could be a major boost for European integration
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Japan Builds Intelligence Agency It Hasn't Had Since World War II
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
China
Health / Medicine
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It's called interoception: the body's ability to sense and interpret its own internal signals. This sense detects things that seem 'invisible' but are happening constantly: your heart rate, your breathing, your hunger, the temperature running through your body. "Although we don't take much notice of it, it's an extremely important sense as it ensures that every system in the body is working optimally,"
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DEA to Temporarily Schedule 7-Oh and Related Substances to Protect Public Safety
This temporary scheduling action does not apply to botanical kratom products that contain naturally occurring 7-OH below the specified threshold. Instead, it targets synthesized products and those containing elevated concentrations of 7-OH as outlined in the temporary scheduling order. DEA believes these substances pose an imminent threat to public safety given their effects are highly unpredictable.
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Alzheimer's Blood Tests Offer New Promise to Diagnose and Predict the Disease
Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp
Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda
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After record heat, could the Atlantic make Britain's weather more extreme?
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Climate free fall: why the biggest risk to our economies is yet to be recognized
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Global Warming at 3 °C by 2050? What's Behind the New German Climate Warning
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Scientists Found Gold in the Most Ironic Place Possible
Geologists working with the crew of the Research Vessel (R/V) Shinsei Maru have uncovered an unusually potent deposit of actual elemental gold deeply interlaced within pyrite, commonly known as “fool’s gold,” in record-breaking concentrations as high as 1.9% by weight. Yes, that’s right—they found actual gold within fool’s gold,
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78F to 88F. Guidance on upper indoor temperature limits: Protecting the health of seniors
Health Canada recommends an upper indoor temperature limit of 26°C to protect older adults, defined in this document as those aged 60 and over, from heat-related illness and death. This threshold is based on a rapid evidence review of available epidemiological studies and controlled exposure research, and aligns with World Health Organization guidance and policies in several Canadian jurisdictions. Research indicates that indoor temperatures above 26°C increase physiological strain and risk of heat-related illnesses; sustained exposure to indoor temperatures between 26°C and 31°C, especially overnight, should be avoided whenever possible.
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Wildfires in Ontario make Toronto air quality worst in world
