2026-05-30
Horseshit
Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering
Musk
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They hate none so fiercely as the apostate: Musk abandoned his own solar electric economy to burn gas for an unused AI chat
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ChatGPT isn't the only chatbot pulling answers from Elon Musk's Grokipedia
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Danish Pension Blacklists SpaceX over 'Catastrophic Governance'
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SpaceX skeptics' added reason for concern: Musk comments diverge from IPO filing
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SpaceX's index fund debut will look nothing like what most investors expect
Electric / Self Driving cars
Robot uprising / Humanoid Helpers
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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Microsoft walks back "Microsoft Windows Defender is all you need" statement
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Microsoft 0-day feud escalates as researcher threatens another exploit dump
The vulnerabilities known as RedSun, UnDefend, BlueHammer, YellowKey, GreenPlasma, and MiniPlasma were not responsibly disclosed. In response to the unnecessary risk created by these disclosures, our security teams have been working around the clock to understand the impact, protect our customers, and develop security updates. We remain firmly opposed to these actions, and any disclosure outside proper coordination that could harm our customers and the digital ecosystem. Uncoordinated disclosures that put proof-of-concept code for unpatched vulnerabilities into the hands of bad actors are never justifiable and have real-world consequences. Our security teams across the company work tirelessly tracking threat actors who look for weaknesses just like these to attack Microsoft and our customers. Our Digital Crimes Unit will continue bringing cases against these actors and those that enable their criminal activity – coordinating as needed with law enforcement around the world.
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California Attorney General sues 23andMe successor for 2023 data breach
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Social media bans for teenagers lack evidence and pose risks, scientists say
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We envision 2.1 as our last major update of Factorio, and we will shift the focus onto long term support. So things like bug fixes, platform support/compatibility, modding features, etc. Other than that we feel we've reached a good place to conclude the active gameplay development.
TechSuck / Geek Bait
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Supercomputers once worth millions to be auctioned
One of the machines is called a Cray Triton T-932 and is believed to be one of only three left in the world. It was once owned by the UK government and while the exact price of this one is not known, the model had a list price of $39m (£29m) at the time. One the machines is the first Cray T3D, known as Typhoon, once the fastest supercomputer in Europe, weighing more than three tonnes and nearly 2m tall.
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
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NASA Details Its Plan to Build a Lunar Base at the Moon's South Pole
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Visible to Orlando: Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket explodes during prelaunch test
The company's powerful New Glenn rocket exploded during a routine prelaunch engine test at Florida's Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Thursday night (May 28), creating a huge fireball that lit up the dark Space Coast skies. Nobody was injured, Blue Origin said in an update on X on Thursday night. But damage to the pad — Launch Complex 36 (LC-36) — could be extensive, judging by the extent of the explosion, which multiple rocket-watchers captured on video.
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Blue Origin's New Glenn explodes on the pad during static fire test; no injuries
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Blue Origin New Glenn rocket explodes on launch pad during engine-firing test
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Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket exploded during a static fire test
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Blue Origin rocket, owned by Jeff Bezos, explodes during test in Florida
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Blue Origin New Glenn Rocket Apparently Explodes at Cape Canaveral, Florida
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Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket explodes during testing in Florida
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Here's why the failure of Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket is so catastrophic
Multiple sources have confirmed that there is significant damage to Blue Origin’s launch site in Florida, LC-36A. The company invested years and at least hundreds of millions of dollars in this facility. The scale of the massive lightning towers is difficult to comprehend unless one has climbed one of them. The company does not have another launch site for New Glenn. It has begun preliminary work on a nearby pad, LC-36B, and has plans to develop another site at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. But these projects are just getting started. Rebuilding the company’s pad, or finishing a new one, will likely take at least a year, even with a major effort by Blue Origin, and drawing upon Jeff Bezos’ nearly infinite resources. One source familiar with pad rebuilds estimated that 15 months was a “best case” scenario.
You might wonder what the big deal is. SpaceX has been blowing up Starship rockets left and right, and the space nerds seem to be cheering them on. The reality is that Blue Origin took a more traditional design route with New Glenn, as opposed to SpaceX’s iterative design, which seeks to test, fly, fail, and fix hardware. The New Glenn first stage had performed nearly flawlessly during its first three flights. It is a mature design. Because of this, Blue Origin had reached the point where it was poised to begin near-monthly launches of the vehicle during the second half of the year, serving a variety of customers, from NASA to Amazon, AST SpaceMobile, and its own internal payloads. With the Vulcan rocket also currently offline due to an anomaly, it once again places all of the US medium- and heavy-lift launch capacity in SpaceX’s basket, with its Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets.
- I must submit that it easier for the public to have confidence in multiply tested, failed and fixed designs. The NASA attitude of "we got it right and you may not say otherwise" doesn't engender trust.
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AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
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Anthropic reaches $965B valuation, surpassing OpenAI as most valuable AI firm
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Anthropic hits $965B valuation with latest funding round, overtaking OpenAI
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Anthropic's growth is 'just the tip of the sphere' for AI rally
investor demand for AI companies is just getting started, according to Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives. Ives told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Friday that “for the first time in 30 years, the U.S. is ahead of China” on technology. He said that Anthropic’s latest valuation of $965 billion after securing $65bn in funding on Thursday is “just the tip of the sphere,” and investors should turn their attention to data layer companies, such as Snowflake, Datadog and InnoData. “Our view is the second, third, fourth derivative, just like we saw this week with Snowflake and Dell, is showing where the spending is,” he added.
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Evidence that the first papal encyclical on AI was substantially written by AI
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Is Peter Thiel the Target of Pope Leo's Gandalf Quote? An Investigation
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GPUs and RAM Are in Short Supply, but the Real Bottleneck for AI Is Electricians
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Nvidia bets $150B on Taiwan as Trump's plan to make US an AI hub backfires
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The $500K AI Film That "Premiered at Cannes" Was Not in the Official Festival
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Corporate America Is Starting to Ration AI as Cost Skyrockets
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LLMs believe false statements even after explicit warnings that they're false
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Microsoft data suggests using AI is more expensive than hiring people
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Sam Altman Says AI 'Jobs Apocalypse' He Once Predicted Probably Won't Happen
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Ronny Chieng Tells Harvard to 'Destroy AI' as Graduates Cheer
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Mystery company accidentally blew $500M on Claude AI in a single month
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Startup offers free home cleaning–if it can record it all for robot training
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Apollo and Blackstone are wrangling $36B to buy Google chips for Anthropic
Neo Gambling / Crypto con games
Economicon / Business / Finance
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
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Judiciary Tried to Hide Judge's Name. It Left a Roadmap to Identify Her Instead
As soon as we flagged an unnamed federal judge having sex in chambers as part of an extramarital affair with a “high ranking law enforcement officer,” everyone asked the immediate follow-up, “how is a federal judge unable to afford a hotel room?” Followed soon after by, “who is the anonymous judge?” Because despite the severity of the allegations — an affair that raised serious blackmail risks, attending openly partisan events, and lying to investigators when caught — the Eleventh Circuit and the Judicial Conference both concealed the judge’s identity.
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We are going to DEMAND that nonprofits know their grant recipients
The IRS is now giving guidance on the Form 990, which nonprofits they have to file. We are going to DEMAND that nonprofits know their grant recipients." "So if a grant recipient is violent, if they are suppressing people's rights, then YOU are responsible for that."
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FCC warns US broadcasters their licenses are a privilege, not a right
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How did Governor Lee know he could promise a $30 million incentive to Starbucks if it hadn’t yet been debated in a forum open to the public? I am not accusing the five members of the Tennessee State Funding Board of doing anything illegal. To the contrary, I am sure they have very good counsel who ensured that what they did is technically in accordance with state law. But that doesn’t make it right.
Trump
Democrats
Left Angst
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The White House Intervened to Get a $620M Deal for Donald Trump Jr
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Trump Administration Defends Samuel Alito's Son as Secretive Role Revealed
Treasury Department officials defended the employment of Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito's son Thursday after a report revealed he held a senior legal role inside the department during the High Court cases involving President Donald Trump.
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Republicans are poised to finish this year’s redistricting war 10 seats ahead of Democrats.
The GOP kicked off the fight last year in Texas, changing boundaries for US House districts in the hopes of improving the party’s chances of surviving a blue wave this fall, with Democrats responding in turn. The US Supreme Court’s blockbuster decision last month to gut one of the remaining pillars of the 1965 Voting Rights Act further supercharged redistricting efforts across the South, prompting several Republican-controlled states to move election dates and eliminate districts with sizable Black populations.
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OMB's Proposed Federal Rules That May Destroy American Science
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Federal judge orders Trump's name be removed from Kennedy Center
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SEC moves to repeal rule that companies report greenhouse emissions,climate risk
Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security
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In the annals of Deep State WTF-ery, is there a stranger case than CIA officer David Rush turning up with $40-million in 303 one-kilogram gold bars, plus $2-million in cash, plus a stash of 30 mostly Rolex watches? Well, yeah, the stranger story is how the guy got hired by the CIA in the first place.
Rush first applied for a job at the CIA in March 2006. He claimed to have a bachelor’s degree in math from Clemson University and a master’s from the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI). He was rejected. He reapplied later that same year. Bumped again. He reapplied again in 2009, adding a new credential: that he’d been a US Navy test pilot and flight trainer. This time, he was hired. Rush’s college credentials were found to be false, but it is unclear when that was discovered. Since he included them in his two earlier 2006 failed applications, why were they not flagged in his successful 2009 application? His claim of being a US Navy pilot was also found to be false (he was an information systems tech in his Navy service). The FBI affidavit unsealed recently details the pattern of lies across all applications.
Rush allegedly requested the gold and foreign currency from the CIA for “work-related expenses” between November 2025 and March 2026. The agency later could not account for the assets or locate records explaining their official purpose. A search of a storage locker at CIA connected to Rush turned up only a small amount of the requisitioned cash.
External Security / Militaria / Diplomania
World
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Indian brand sues Google, wins ban on rivals bidding on its trademark
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Germany's most wanted woman jailed after three decades evading police
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EU's Economic Powers Seek Unity to Push Capital Markets Merger
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The EU Is Going Through a Trump-Fueled Breakup with Big Tech
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Canada Dips into Technical Recession for First Time Since 2020
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When the Portuguese government decided to add a 10-cent deposit to the price of every plastic bottle under 3 liters (101 fl oz), a small family business in central Portugal did the math and launched a 3.1-liter (105 fl oz) bottle.
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UK Visa Portal exposed passports and selfies – then called the lawyers on us
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
China
Health / Medicine
Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp
Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda
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Can DEET attract mosquitoes? A lab study offers clues
Yellow fever mosquitoes (Aedes aegypti) exposed to the insect repellent DEET can learn to associate the off-putting chemical with food, researchers report May 28 in Journal of Experimental Biology. The finding suggests that mosquitoes can link unpleasant odors with rewards — turning a negative experience into a positive one — although it’s unclear what might happen outside the lab.
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Scientists accidentally discover sea cucumber with 'tissue immortality'
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Poisonous invasion: What is the 'devil's trumpet' harming crops in Iraq?
Iraq’s Ministry of the Interior has warned farmers and residents to be on the alert for an invasion of datura plants – commonly known as jimsonweed, thorn apple or devil’s trumpet.
