2026-04-01
Horseshit
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New Technique Turns Everyday Surfaces Like Walls and Desks into Touch Panels
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We Used to Think Everybody Heard a Voice Inside Their Heads – But We Were Wrong
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Spacecraft Heat Shields Could Violently "Burst" in Alien Atmospheres
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I went down a rabbit hole on who owns every power tool brand
TTI, a Hong Kong company called Techtronic Industries, owns Milwaukee. They also own Ryobi and make Ridgid tools. They bought Milwaukee from Atlas Copco in 2005 for about $626 million. Stanley Black & Decker owns DeWalt, Craftsman, Black+Decker, Porter-Cable, Irwin, and Lenox. They've blown through over $6 billion in acquisitions since 2002.
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Why some American accents have endured – while others have faded away
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"mini?" World’s largest Cadbury Mini egg weighs as much as an emu.
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Angry parents: 'Phones should be illegal for kids until they're 18 '
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‘Something Dark is Going On’: Nine Top-Level Scientists Die or Go Missing in Past Year
celebrity gossip
Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering
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Entirety of Wikinews to be shut down
the Foundation has decided to permanently shut down the Wikinews project, one of Wikimedia's oldest projects. Starting on May 4, editing and new content creation will no longer be possible with all of the pages on the site locked in read-only mode.
Musk
Electric / Self Driving cars
Religion / Tribal / Culture War and Re-Segregation
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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How Apple became Apple: The definitive oral history of its earliest days
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YouTube chat logs reveal employees aimed for “viewer addiction” and scrapped safety tools - Dexerto
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GitHub backs down, kills Copilot pull-request ads after backlash
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Disney Reportedly Interested in Acquiring Epic Games and Fortnite
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Amazon Leo Satellite Internet Coming to Delta Flights in 2028
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Authors' lucky break in court may help class action over Meta torrenting
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DRAM deals: this is genuinely insane
Micron is now down ~33% from its post-earnings high. Revenue up 196% year over year, EPS up 682%, and the stock is in freefall because the company restructured its entire business around a demand signal that came from non-binding letters and is now being compressed out of existence by a research paper.
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All Google users in the US can now change their Gmail address
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The Software on Your Phone Was Shipped by People Who Don’t Use It
This pattern isn’t limited to phones. It’s everywhere in tech right now. The product you’re using is almost certainly 90% great and 10% infuriating — and that 10% is almost always a product management failure, not an engineering one. Someone decided to ship before the details were right. Someone prioritized a spec sheet bullet point over the daily experience. Someone built a feature that demos well in a boardroom but annoys you every morning.
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OkCupid gave 3M dating-app photos to facial recognition firm, FTC says
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Google Touts Dubious Android Browser Benchmarks; Press Swallows It Whole
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Samsung's new app claims to alleviate motion sickness using sound
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
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Americans Have Never Been All That Excited About Going to the Moon
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Astronaut's Condition That Led to Space Station Evacuation Remains a Mystery
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On Wednesday, NASA will attempt to send four astronauts around the moon on a mission called Artemis II. This will be second flight of NASA’s SLS rocket, and the first time the 20-year-old Orion capsule flies with people on board. The trouble is that the heat shield on Orion blows chunks. Not in some figurative, pejorative sense, but in the sense that when NASA flew this exact mission in 2022, large pieces of material blew out of Orion’s heat shield during re-entry, leaving divots. Large bolts embedded in the heat shield also partially eroded and melted through.
NASA is going to fly Artemis II based on vibes, hoping that whatever happened to the heat shield on Artemis I won’t get bad enough to harm the crew on Artemis II.
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Has Something Changed in the Near-Earth Meteoroid Environment?
The number of large fireball events (those seen by 50+ witnesses) has roughly doubled in Q1 2026 compared to the five-year average. But the total number of fireballs is about normal. So it’s not that more rocks are hitting us — it’s that more of them are big enough to notice.
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Can humans have babies in space? It may be harder than expected
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
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Claude Code's source code has been leaked via a map file in their NPM registry
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Anthropic, The Pentagon, and the Future of Autonomous Weapons
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100x Less Power: The Breakthrough That Could Solve AI's Energy Crisis
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Restoring old photos with AI is a fundamentally broken concept.
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Anthropic: Claude Code users hitting usage limits 'way faster than expected'
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Americans' AI Use Increases While Views on It Sour, Poll on AI Finds
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Goldman CIO Marco Argenti on the Warp-Speed Improvements in AI
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College students, professors are making their own AI rules. They don't agree
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New York Times drops freelance journalist who used AI to write book review
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The Subprime AI Crisis Is Here
there really isn’t any way that these services make sense at a monthly rate, and every single AI company loses incredible amounts of money, all while failing to make that much revenue in the first place.
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Data centers' heat exhaust is not raising the land temperature around them
Economicon / Business / Finance
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American Exchange Group to buy sneaker maker Allbirds for $39M
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U.S. stocks are set to deliver their worst quarter in nearly four years
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Oracle lays off employees as it curbs costs during AI buildout
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Freight bankruptcies mount in March as trucking, logistics firms file Chapter 11
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'Worst in Show' CES products include AI fridges, AI companions and AI doorbells
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KPMG Faces Allegations of Blown Audit in Private Credit Collapse
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Allbirds, Once Valued at $4B, Just Sold Its Assets for Next to Nothing
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Microsoft in Talks with Chevron, Engine No. 1 over $7B Texas Power Plant
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
Trump
Democrats
Left Angst
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"De-banking" was great until it was used on them: She Spoke Out About Gaza. Now She Can't Use a Credit Card
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President's new science council: 9 billionaires and 1 scientist
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Kristi Noem’s husband seen ‘pouting in photos with fake breasts.’
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Weeks After Denouncing Censorship, Zuckerberg Texted Musk to Remove DOGE Content
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TMZ Has a New Obsession: Vacationing Members of Congress
Recently, the outlet has devoted particular attention to how members of Congress are behaving during the funding lapse at the Department of Homeland Security. TMZ requested tips on Thursday about sightings of lawmakers who left D.C. without reaching a funding deal, leaving many DHS employees to miss paychecks for at least two more weeks.
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The Oil Crisis Is About to Get Physical
In normal times, about 20 percent of the world’s oil production passes through the Strait of Hormuz. That flow has been cut off except for Iranian oil and a handful of other vessels the Iranians are allowing through. This disruption has led to a large spike in oil futures prices.
But this price rise has been speculative, driven by the (justified) expectation of future shortages rather than a current lack of oil. In fact, so far deliveries to markets around the world haven’t declined, because shipping oil from the Persian Gulf to major markets takes 4-6 weeks. As a result there was a large quantity of oil already at sea, outside the Strait, when the war began. However, this grace period is about to end. The oil crisis is about to get physical. The map at the top of this post shows J.P. Morgan’s estimates of when tankers from the Gulf will stop arriving at various destinations. Deliveries to Asian markets will end this week; deliveries to Europe will end next week.
Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security
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FBI Confirms Kash Patel Email Hack as US Offers $10M Reward for Hackers
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Arms Dealer Pleads Guilty to Conspiring to Export US-Made Ammo Used in Ukraine
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Michigan synagogue attack was Hezbollah-inspired act of terrorism, FBI says.
This man acted under Hezbollah’s direction and control,” Gorgon said. “He intended to kill others, not just himself.”
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She uncovered a terrifying lab hidden in California, with alleged ties to China
As she walked deeper into the warehouse, passing lab workers filling pregnancy test kits, she located the source of the smell that had brought her there — droppings from 1,000 lab-tested mice, she told The Times during a recent interview. The workers were nice enough, she said, but when she started asking questions she could feel the mood change. “I realized I’m in trouble, and I need to get out of this building without tipping them off that I’m scared,” Harper said. Her discovery blew open an elaborate criminal case with ties to California, Las Vegas and China. The investigation in Reedley found that the lab was part of an elaborate scheme to import COVID tests from China and pass them off as American-made. But there are some who fear the operation was much more complex than that. A congressional committee uncovered payments topping $1 million made to the operator of the Reedley business from banks in the People’s Republic of China. The defendant in the case, Jia Bei Zhu, a Chinese national, has not been charged with running an illicit biolab and his attorney has denied it. The vials discovered in Reedley were never tested. But for some officials, the questions left unanswered from that lab in Reedley, then Nevada, underscore America’s vulnerability to unregulated biohazards that could be used by bad actors for criminal behavior and even terrorism.
External Security / Militaria / Diplomania
World
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Germany presents new climate action programme
Germany's cabinet today presented a climate action programme with a strong focus on renewable power and industry electrification, encompassing 67 measures designed to cut greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 27mn t/yr of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) until 2030, although the country's climate experts warned that it is unlikely to achieve these reductions.
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Meta, TikTok and Google under investigation about Australia's social media ban
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Leaked Calls Expose Hungary and Slovakia as Secret Kremlin Backchannel Inside EU
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Dutch Finance Ministry takes treasury banking portal offline after breach
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Air Canada CEO to Step Down Amid Backlash over Lack of French Comments
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How companies are learning to stop worrying and benefit from pay transparency
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Microsoft faces second major UK investigation over cloud licensing
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Meta, Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube aren't complying with U16 ban, Australia says
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UK Police will no longer waste time investigating legal social media posts
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Global Ban on Digital Duties Expires After Stalled Talks at WTO Meeting
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Irish lawmaker urges Stripe to flout US sanctions on UN investigator Albanese
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Top Brussels official urges Europeans to work from home and drive less
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French Senate votes to block social media access for under-15s
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Australia readies social media court action citing teen ban breaches
Iran / Houthi
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Why the US Navy Won't Blast the Iranians and 'Open' Strait of Hormuz
the days of omnipotent U.S. sea power as a power projection instrument close to well defended shorelines are coming to an end. This change raises questions about the future of navies and the wisdom of investment in these extremely expensive instruments of national power.
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Iran’s internet blackout hiding strike damage and suppressing dissent, Israeli officials say.
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IRGC threatens imminent strikes on US tech giants across the Middle East
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Palantir in Focus Regarding Alleged US Attack on School in Iran
Israel
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
China
Health / Medicine
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Court of appeal says it cannot rule on which identical twin fathered a child
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Vaping likely to cause cancer, new Australian review of evidence finds
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Water utility announces it's ditching fluoride then reveals it did so years ago
On March 20, Central Alabama Water (CAW) made an announcement that it had discontinued water fluoridation. The announcement cited “aging equipment” and “increasing maintenance and component replacement” as justifications for the removal of fluoride, which it indicated had already occurred. But the water utility also highlighted unsubstantiated health concerns and noted that people can buy toothpaste and mouthwash that contain fluoride to protect their teeth. Days later, a CAW spokesperson revealed that three of its water treatment plants had abandoned fluoride years ago—in January 2023, August 2023, and March 2024, respectively. “It’s important to realize that pretty much no one in Birmingham has had any fluoride in their water for two years,” a CAW spokesperson told local WBRC news on March 24. The removal occurred before a 2025 law that restructured the water board, the spokesperson explained, adding that there was “no public notification” of the change. The spokesperson said this lack of notice meant residents weren’t able to “consult with their dentists.”
Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda
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Scientists shocked to find lab gloves may be skewing microplastics data
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Scientists uncovered the nutrients bees were missing – Colonies surged 15-fold
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Seeds of doubt:The dark side of an Italian energy giant's green jet fuel promise
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And Snow will be a thing of the past by year 2000: A satellite-smashing chain reaction could spiral out of control
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Scientists discover freshwater reservoir beneath Great Salt Lake
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'junk': E-waste from rich nations floods local markets in Nigeria
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Chernobyl Fungus Seems to Have Evolved the Ability to Harness Radiation
