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38 votes
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Queensland neighbours show how Voice to Parliament is splitting Australia
2 votes -
Inside ShadowDragon, the tool that lets ICE monitor pregnancy tracking sites and Fortnite players
23 votes -
X announces it’s shutting down ‘Circles’ as of October 31st
15 votes -
The food industry pays ‘influencer’ dietitians to shape your eating habits
34 votes -
UK's Online Safety Bill: Crackdown on harmful social media content agreed
27 votes -
Elon Musk thinking of charging money for Twitter
48 votes -
Notes on using a single-person Mastodon server
24 votes -
TikTok fined record £300m for putting children’s privacy at risk
28 votes -
We're all living on r/MadeMeSmile's Internet Now
77 votes -
Teen’s death after eating a single chip highlights risks of ultra-spicy foods
62 votes -
The batshit crazy story of the day Elon Musk decided to personally rip servers out of a data center
80 votes -
YouTube is testing a three-strikes policy for ad blocking
173 votes -
USENET, the OG social network, rises again like a text-only phoenix
55 votes -
China behind ‘largest ever’ digital influence operation
15 votes -
Elon Musk’s X sues California over content moderation law, claiming it violates free speech
25 votes -
Japanese YouTuber sentenced to two years in prison for sharing gameplay and anime videos
16 votes -
How telling people to die became normal - merciless trolling is a fact of online life that may never go away
37 votes -
Reddit faces content quality concerns after its Great Mod Purge
161 votes -
You're not traumatized, you're just hurt
20 votes -
Meta lost a legal battle Wednesday to halt a Norwegian ban on its advertising practices that came with hefty daily fines
22 votes -
Twitter accused of helping Saudi Arabia commit human rights abuses
21 votes -
In Alabama, white tide rushes on
10 votes -
What will prevent this site from becoming Reddit 2.0?
And I don’t mean that in a good way. In just a few years, Reddit has devolved from a place to find relevant and quirky information, to basically a platform pushing outrage porn, political...
And I don’t mean that in a good way. In just a few years, Reddit has devolved from a place to find relevant and quirky information, to basically a platform pushing outrage porn, political divisiveness, and mindless memes, with occasional humor sprinkled in.
The outrage porn is the worst, just exhausting and tiresome. The voting mechanics are mostly to blame for this. Since outrage draws the most engagement, the more people who interact with the site, then the more this type of material will surface and thrive.
The political divisiveness germinates similarly, with the added impetus of state actors throwing fuel on the flames.
The memes are seemingly harmless, but are no substitutes for actual dialogue.
I would just like to see a platform that places a premium on meaningful social dialogue for the future betterment of all involved.
15 votes -
In Threads’ dwindling engagement, social media’s flawed hypothesis is laid bare
17 votes -
X to collect biometric and employment data
39 votes -
Europeans in service of Russian propaganda machine
10 votes -
Amateur sleuths patrol the town of Oulu, Finland to try to recover stolen bicycles and take on bike thieves
11 votes -
Social media decline: Users are shifting to messaging apps and group chats
36 votes -
Mastodon’s next major release enables full-text search. A few flagship instances already have it.
10 votes -
Maryland school district sues social media alleging addictive design rewires young brains
20 votes -
github-less-social: Filter list to make GitHub less like a social media platform
16 votes -
YouTube's privacy settings now block you from seeing suggested content
I've always been a bit of a privacy enthousiast. Have had everything blocked that Google and by extension YouTube wants to scrape off you. This means I've also blocked my view history. Recently...
I've always been a bit of a privacy enthousiast. Have had everything blocked that Google and by extension YouTube wants to scrape off you. This means I've also blocked my view history.
Recently YouTube started giving out a warning on the homepage that you have blocked your view history, that you can change it in your privacy settings and that it helps them serve you better content. What it also means is that your homepage is just one big popup to guilt trip you into sharing your data. The homepage won't show any suggested content anymore.
While it is in their interest to do so and since they are a company wanting to make money it is understandable. Nevertheless it seems harsh from going to see content that you might like to only seeing a big warning sign right now.
What are you experiences with this?
34 votes -
Black Twitter abandons Musk's X. The influential online community that gave rise to social movements like #BlackLivesMatter is now a ‘digital diaspora’ in search of a new home.
66 votes -
Europe is cracking down on Big Tech. This is what will change when you sign on
81 votes -
Saudi Arabia: Brother of prominent UK based scholar sentenced to death over tweets
12 votes -
Most of my Instagram ads are for drugs, stolen credit cards, hacked accounts, counterfeit money, and weapons
41 votes -
‘Rebel canning’ is having a moment, whether or not it should
58 votes -
Here's the plan - a video to the audience from LTT
23 votes -
Following Elon Musk’s lead, Big Tech is surrendering to disinformation
35 votes -
Canadian court upholds social media sensitivity training requirement for Jordan Peterson
62 votes -
Linus Tech Tips pauses production as controversy swirls
121 votes -
TikTok’s plan to take on Spotify and Apple Music
13 votes -
The fight over what’s real (and what’s not) on dissociative identity disorder TikTok
20 votes -
Canada demands Facebook lift news ban to allow wildfire info sharing
51 votes -
When Instagram was used for government communication
6 votes -
It's not just male influencers who preach problematic manipulation
21 votes -
The creators of TikTok caused my website to shut down
12 votes -
Twitch will let streamers ban users from watching their streams
15 votes -
Madison Reeve explains why she quit Linus Tech Tips (CW: self harm, slurs, sexual harassment)
167 votes