rticks, to random
@rticks@mastodon.social avatar

Luddite is a word with two synonyms and you might be an advocate for old tech

So anyway I think Geraniums are cool and you should have a pet hamster

"Why is your post talking about AI and not about hamsters even though your answer did both?"

This guy....

helma, to random Dutch
@helma@mastodon.social avatar

Een smerig stuk in het AD waarin de framing van Assange als naarling weer es niet van de lucht is. Al eet ie spaghetti met z'n tenen: het doet er geen fluit toe. Maar nergens in het artikel gaat het over zijn journalistiek. Het hele artikel voegt niets toe.
Blegh.

https://archive.ph/Qli7t

macrumors, to random
@macrumors@mastodon.social avatar
Kdude,
@Kdude@mastodon.social avatar
angeidheal, to queer
@angeidheal@abairthusa.scot avatar

Google Delists Sites Providing DIY Hormone Therapy at Behest of UK Government

https://www.404media.co/google-delists-sites-providing-diy-hormone-therapy-at-behest-of-uk-government/

Google has removed two websites providing “DIY” hormone replacement therapy used in gender-affirming care from search results at the request of the UK government, according to legal letters viewed by 404 Media (@404mediaco).

@lgbtqia

skua,
@skua@mastodon.social avatar

@angeidheal @404mediaco @lgbtqia

The sites Google has delisted do not appear in the non-paywalled preview section of the article.

It verges on the edge of being when is paywalled like this. More so when it is .

Below may be one of the two sites delisted in the UK.

If I was using this information I'd do a site rip now as a precaution.

https://diyhrt.wiki/

perkoch, to random
@perkoch@mastodon.world avatar

If someone from an unknown number calls you and asks if you can hear them, do not say «yes». Take a breath. Turn the question back on them and state, “Why do you ask?” A recording of the word «yes» can be used for scams.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/can-you-hear-me-scam_l_66180cf9e4b011e99abd5a11

NatureMC,
@NatureMC@mastodon.online avatar

@perkoch Better: Never answer calls from unknown numbers!
If in the USA, a simple "yes" works to get money from your bank or credit card, they have a serious privacy problem (or the article is pure .) Catchword: double authentification.
And if you need a recorded yes, just join Whatsapp or cut several words. 😉

blogdiva, to journalism
@blogdiva@mastodon.social avatar

so i guess there is a new trend in niche publications:

  1. find old articles pertinent to niche in MSM like The Guardian

  2. re-write article with headline

  3. profit!

case in point: this LGBTQ Nation clickbait based on a 2018 report, by The Guardian, about a Malaysian newspaper.

haven't journalists heard of CHRONICLES?!?

you can report on past events without having to make it look like it happened now.

you know who made a day job out that? Gabriel García Marquéz.

nitpicking, to journalism
@nitpicking@mstdn.party avatar

AP headline: "A big airline is relaxing its pet policy to let owners bring the companion and a rolling carry-on"

Which one? I need to know to avoid them. (It's American, as it turns out, my least favorite US airline.) They really had to contort to avoid putting the only important part of the story right in the headline, didn't they?

https://www.audacy.com/wcbs880/news/business/a-big-airline-is-relaxing-its-pet-policy-to-let-owners-bring-the-companion-and-a-rolling-carry-on

beandev, to random German
@beandev@social.tchncs.de avatar

Jahre Journalistik studiert, um so einen Scheiß unter Drogen rauszurotzen.

"Qualitätsjournalismus".

Hauptsache Horror, Blut, Gewalt.

Anders ist #Clickbait nicht mehr zu befriedigen.

sharona, to ai

News blips: Prattle and hum

I don’t know about you, but I’m sitting here in “second Winter” which followed “fake Spring”. It means we’re almost to real Spring. I have some other serious fake things to share, but first, I want to recommend a video about a subject I’ve been following for decades.

What causes the Hum?

The “hum” is a worldwide phenomenon where people in certain geographical areas claim to hear a near constant low frequency hum or rumbling. The sound is worse inside and can keep people awake and make them ill. Mysterious hums are a very Fortean topic – “Fortean” being associated with the work of Charles Fort who collected accounts of events that bumped up against scientific views and were, therefore, ignored or rejected. The presence of an unidentified and seemingly untraceable hum has become news in the past decades, as some municipalities have taken citizen complaints seriously. The hums aren’t just in people’s minds, they have been measured and independently verified. The most famous hums were documented in Taos, New Mexico, Kokomo, Indiana and Bristol, England.

A recent video that chronicles the investigation and conclusions from a hum researcher, Benn Jordan, left me impressed and better informed. Jordan has recorded hums around the world and has made a valuable contribution to figuring out what people might be experiencing. I hope he publishes his work. However, these days, you get the word out more effectively to 2 million+ people (and counting) via a 32-minute YouTube video.

As with any so called “mysterious” phenomenon, Jordan concludes that there isn’t just one answer to what causes “the hum”. It’s clear that industrial noise is rampant these days and people may suffer from individual auditory or mental health issues. Jordan puts forward two more interesting ideas – ototoxicity from medication, and resonance noise generated by high pressure gas lines.

The rise in reports of the hum correlates with the rise in use of pain medications, which can cause damage to the inner ear as a side effect in some people. This ototoxicity effect is a known issue that usually goes away when the person stops taking the drug.

The hum also correlated with proximity to high pressure gas lines where movement of gas through pipes exposed to temperature changes can create sound. This sound can travel particularly well through certain types of bedrock. He presents his evidence for these reasonable conjectures that are worth considering.

The worldwide ‘hum’ phenomenon will never be totally solved but, as I saw with mystery booms, the modern checklist of items for officials to check when trying to fix the issue has become more useful.

Fakebook and Shrimp Jesus

I check Facebook maybe once or twice a week just to catch up with my limited connections and neighborhood news. I noticed my feed content was about 70% ads for “suggested groups” that I had no interest in. Because of data sharing across the internet, Facebook knows the things I usually like to view. Since Facebook wants to keep me on the site and clicking, I got a barrage of customized suggestions. They were mostly gardening stuff or science content, most of which showed a non-believable image for marketing. I’m “vaccinated” against fakery on the internet and highly immune to such garbage, but it is annoying and I can’t help but click sometimes, even when I know it’s not good for me. I eventually did figure out how to adjust my feed to limit these traps. For people who don’t notice this clickbait slide, they may also not have noticed all the AI content on Facebook. Some if it has gone off the edge.

A feature from 404 Media Co. on March 19, 2024 had something to say about Facebook’s craziness. It was titled “Facebook’s Shrimp Jesus, Explained”. No, I hadn’t had the pleasure of Shrimp Jesus in my feed because “Jesus” isn’t a word I typically type into search engines or emails. But for people who do (and that is a lot of people on Facebook), they might have been seeing a bizarre digital meme of the typically imagined face of Jesus horrifically meshed with shrimp parts.

The 404 Media piece by Jason Koehler tells us why Jesus in Crustacean form suddenly became so popular and that other uncanny images are flooding the app:

What is happening, simply, is that hundreds of AI-generated spam pages are posting dozens of times a day and are being rewarded by Facebook’s recommendation algorithm. Because AI-generated spam works, increasingly outlandish things are going viral and are then being recommended to the people who interact with them. Some of the pages which originally seemed to have no purpose other than to amass a large number of followers have since pivoted to driving traffic to webpages that are uniformly littered with ads and themselves are sometimes AI-generated, or to sites that are selling cheap products or outright scams. Some of the pages have also started buying Facebook ads featuring Jesus or telling people to like the page “If you Respect US Army.”

In other words, people clicked on Shrimp Jesus and may have then interacted with bogus “pages” created with the sole intent of serving them ads. Don’t take the bait!

https://i0.wp.com/sharonahill.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/FB-group-shrimp-jesus.png?resize=712%2C587&ssl=1Screenshot of ad for “Love God…” page by a fake account featuring “art” of Shrimp Jesus. Yikes. If you click on stuff like this just to comment, maybe it’s time to reevaluate your life choices.

Most of the graphics for advertising content online these days is heavily edited to the point of being fiction or AI generated entirely. The food isn’t real, the celebrity pics aren’t real, not even the pretty flowers, landscapes or cute animals are real. This is obvious; I sure wish everyone would recognize this and remember it when they are scrolling.

Facebook is LOADED with garbage (which is why I limit my use and really wish it would implode and die). But there is no reasonable alternative to it and, for many, it still is a necessary app. It makes me sad to see many people falling for ads for cheap or bogus products, reposting nonsense warnings that amount to modern chain letters, and wasting their time commenting on worthless pages or groups. There are better things to do.

$10 billion in fraud

In a related, disturbing trend, the US Federal Trade Commission reported that Americans lost more than $10 billion to fraud in 2023. That’s likely an underestimate because many people won’t admit they were victims that fell for scams.

The top scams are related to investments and imposter schemes, where digital tools and transactions make it easier to target the vulnerable and execute bad deals. Online shopping was regularly cited in complaints to the FTC. Scammers also use emotional hot button topics to get people to fork over cash – romance, immigration, and finances. Even those who think they are immune fall for them.

Often, older adults fall for online scams because they don’t realize how easy it is to spoof identity or credentials. According to the researchers, the AI content (such as voice cloning) is now fooling even younger people who grew up online. People in their 20s, however, are more likely to report scams even if they didn’t lose a lot of money.

The online world is fraught with peril. Be careful out there. Click with care. And maybe entirely avoid all creepy Jesus memes.

https://sharonahill.com/?p=8481

smurthys, to coffee
@smurthys@hachyderm.io avatar

Headline says "Dark roasted and dangerous: Everything you should know about caffeine intoxication"

implying something about dark roasted coffee is dangerous. So, I go into the article but find it has nothing do with roasting, let alone dark roasting.

In fact, the words "dark" and "roast" appear exactly once in the article, and that's in the headline. 😠

https://us.cnn.com/2024/03/11/health/what-is-caffeine-intoxication-wellness/index.html

profcarroll, to random
@profcarroll@federate.social avatar

um double swiping a rewards card on a gas pump is the laziest programmer mode idea ever https://futurism.com/the-byte/free-gas-glitch

metin, to science
@metin@graphics.social avatar
beandev, to random German
@beandev@social.tchncs.de avatar

Nachrichtenbullshit.

"Qualitätsjournalismus".

.

constantorbit, to random
@constantorbit@hachyderm.io avatar

Is it just me?

I will pretty much NEVER click on a headline that says:

"The <N> <X> you must <Y> in 2024".

No, I don't "MUST". I might want to once I read about them, sure, but...

And yet it must work as clickbait, because you see it all over.

(this was one was particularly disappointing to see, in The Atlantic 😢 )

uastronomer, to random
@uastronomer@mastodon.monoceros.co.za avatar

Here's a first: I just made a filter for one of the major newspapers called "Lazy journalism". They do things like publish sloppy "Opinion" pieces with no byline. They like to post headlines on social media but when you click through, there's no article; just the same headline and photo.

Raising to new heights.

bespacific, to rally
@bespacific@newsie.social avatar

You Should Go to a . For many , the former has become an . They should see for themselves what his is really about. The Atlantic read free https://archive.is/ftfNu

bespacific,
@bespacific@newsie.social avatar

@clane22 I do not "watch" any news. I read as much as I can from US & around the world. Reading permits more control of emotional interaction with the information and better processing of facts vs lies. The small "sound bites" of news are meant to stimulate visceral reaction, much like the headlines. Ignore the headlines.... they can contradict the facts in the story. Reading takes a lot of time. It also is more likely to produce . And saves your energy.

deinol, to history
@deinol@dice.camp avatar

Facebook Clickbait Headline: Ancient shipwreck with Orichalcum may prove Atlantis existed!

Me: Um, that’s a copper/zinc alloy. We call that brass. It’s a neet find, very early for brass, but it’s not Atlantis.

Bluedonkey, to random
@Bluedonkey@mastodon.social avatar

Since I watched his videos yesterday, the YT algorithm has decided I need to know when he posts new ones (no need to click the bell or subscribe it seems).

Anyway, this was the title of today's video and I was thinking that he may have found a way to be rid of the EV he hates so much.

But no, that title is just click bait. The "accident" he had was he entered the wrong address for his destination in the nav. The damage is to his "reputation" not the car.

virbonus, to random German
@virbonus@sueden.social avatar

Immer wieder bestätigt die mit solchem esoterikfreundlichem , dass die Abokündigung vor Jahren eine gute Entscheidung war. Schade aber um eine früher mal gute Zeitung, die ich jahrzehntelang gern abonniert hatte.
https://www.zeit.de/2023/52/kinder-medizinische-behandlung-alternativmedizin-impfung-kompromisse

MJung, to fedibikes German
@MJung@sueden.social avatar

Ich finde gut, dass auch dieser mal öffentlich thematisiert und damit hervorgehoben wird. Lösungen sind allerdings durchaus möglich, wenn der Wille und die Bereitschaft zur Veränderung bestehen.

@mastobikes
@fedibikes
@fedibikes
@SheDrivesMobility

https://m.faz.net/aktuell/rhein-main/frankfurt/verkehrswende-zwingt-feuerwehr-in-frankfurt-zum-notbetrieb-19377538.html

bierhuhn,

@MJung @SheDrivesMobility

Also in dem Artikel geht es doch nur darum, dass die Feuerwehr gerade sehr viele Anträge zu Änderungen im Verkehrsraum bearbeiten muss und damit personell an ihre (bürokratischen) Grenzen kommt. Es geht NICHT um verlängerte Einsatzzeiten oder dass die Feuerwehr nicht löschen kann. FAZ hat nur die Überschrift schön reißerisch gemacht, damit es genau diesen Eindruck erweckt.

kkarhan, to Discord
@kkarhan@mstdn.social avatar

That's just bad :

If it was any good, they'd or at least publicly release it and not it on trash like !

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vnPEF10D-Ps

nilz, to Youtube German
@nilz@norden.social avatar

Ziemlich , mit welchen Mitteln ​r auf gehen:

Inhaltslose Beiträge zum von . Bilder seiner - die allerdings erst am 08.12. stattfinden wird, seine vermeintlichen " - 5 hours before he died!", die traurigen Abschiedsworte von , die aus alten Interviews zusammengeschnitten wurden...

Zum Kotzen, was für eine Welt.

opensuse, to opensource
@opensuse@fosstodon.org avatar

Whether young, old, experienced or a newbie, @opensuse strives to be of people & their efforts to contribute to . People trashing contribution with articles & insults is not tolerated in a atmosphere. Let's foster a culture of respect.

kkarhan, to Youtube
@kkarhan@mstdn.social avatar

hat richtig Probleme mit und :

Ernsthaft....

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